From the moment news broke that a teenager’s body was found in a car registered to D4vd, public attention has been swirling and now authorities have called one of his closest associates to explain what he knew. That man is Robert Morgenroth, who holds dual roles as the general manager of D4vd’s record label and the president of his touring company. This week, he found himself under the spotlight, testifying before a grand jury that’s examining the death of 15‑year‑old Celeste Rivas Hernandez.In the hallway after a grueling day of testimony, Morgenroth was reportedly overheard telling his lawyer that the prosecutor Beth Silverman pressed him hard about why he didn’t alert police. According to witnesses, he said he “didn’t feel like I had the responsibility” and that he “just wanted to continue with the tour.” The remark whether spontaneous or rehearsed has stirred new questions about what he knew and when.Who is Robert MorgenrothRobert Morgenroth serves as the general manager at the label behind D4vd, and also heads the touring‑company side that organizes and coordinates concert tours under the name Zara Brothers Travel. In simple terms, he has been deeply involved in both the creative and business sides of D4vd’s career meaning he’s among the people closest to the singer’s daily operations and movements.That closeness is what makes his grand jury appearance so significant. Investigators aren’t just trying to reconstruct a timeline or vehicle history: they are probing whether people in D4vd’s inner circle knew about suspicious circumstances and failed to act. The grand jury is reviewing evidence related to Rivas’ death, including the crucial question raised during Robert Morgenroth’s testimony if someone in his position knew something or smelled something wrong why was the police not notified immediately?The discovery itself was horrifying. On September 8, 2025, Los Angeles police found a badly decomposed body in the front trunk of a Tesla registered to D4vd, which had been impounded after being abandoned. The remains were later confirmed to belong to Celeste Rivas Hernandez, a teenager who had reportedly been missing. The car was towed after a foul odour was reported, and its remains remained uncontested for days. Since then, what began as a shocking crime‑scene investigation has grown into a complex legal inquiry involving multiple people, secrets, and wrenching uncertainties.As of now, no one has been formally charged. The investigation is ongoing, and the grand jury’s deliberations may take time. Even so, Robert Morgenroth’s testimony and especially his candid hallway remark about not calling police has become a focal point, intensifying public scrutiny of what members of D4vd’s team knew, and when.In many ways, this moment captures the tangled overlap of fame, responsibility, and accountability and forces a hard question: when something goes deeply wrong, who among those around must act first?