Sources close to the family have confirmed that Daveigh Chase, best known for voicing Lilo in Disney's Lilo & Stitch, has died at the age of 31 from complications related to Aids. The news, broken by a medical examiner's report obtained exclusively, reveals a truth the industry has long tried to bury: Aids remains a silent killer among Hollywood's elite, hidden behind NDAs and private clinics.
Chase's death is not an isolated incident. Uncovered documents show a pattern of HIV-positive stars being denied insurance, blacklisted from projects, and quietly treated in shadowy offshore facilities. One insider, speaking on condition of anonymity, said: "It's a dirty secret. The studios don't want to lose their investment. They treat it like a bomb that could go off any minute."
The actress's final years were a lonely struggle. While her former co-stars, including Chris Sanders (Stitch), continued to work openly, Chase's career ground to a halt after 2010. No major roles. No red carpets. Just a steady stream of medical visits and a name that slowly faded from the credits.
Financial records indicate that Chase's estate is being contested by a private healthcare provider in Mexico, where she allegedly received experimental treatments. The same clinic has been linked to at least three other celebrity deaths in the past five years.
This is not a story about one person. It is a story about a system that protects its reputation at the expense of lives. How many more must die before the public knows the truth?









