Woman, 21, suffered 'heinous, cruel and malicious acts' before death

A South Carolina man left a 21-year-old college student, 21, with more than 100 stab wounds, cuts and other abrasions after kidnapping her when she mistook his car for her Uber ride after a night out in 2019, prosecutors said during the first day of his murder trial. 

Nathaniel Rowland appeared in court Tuesday on charges of kidnapping and murder more than two years after the killing of Samantha Josephson, a University of South Carolina student from Robbinsville, New Jersey. 

Josephson was out with her friends in Columbia’s Five Points entertainment district on March 29, 2019, when she allegedly entered Rowland’s car thinking he was an Uber driver. 

Prosecutors said during opening statements that Rowland kept Josephson in his car for hours as he drove more than 65 miles, before killing her and dumping her body in the woods near his family’s home. 

Rowland, who has pleaded not guilty to the charges and has maintained his innocence. He has been in the Richland County jail since his arrest a day after Josephson’s disappearance.

In opening arguments in Richland County Judicial Center in Columbia, prosecutors previewed evidence and testimony they said would implicate Rowland.  

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Samantha Josephson, a 21-year-old University of South Carolina from Robbinsville, New Jersey who was set to graduate and go to law school, was found dead in March of 2019 in South Carolina

Samantha Josephson, a 21-year-old University of South Carolina from Robbinsville, New Jersey who was set to graduate and go to law school, was found dead in March of 2019 in South Carolina

Defendant Nathaniel Rowland speaks with his attorney, Alicia Goode, right, during his trial in Richland County Court on July 20

Defendant Nathaniel Rowland speaks with his attorney, Alicia Goode, right, during his trial in Richland County Court on July 20

Evidence includes surveillance camera footage of Josephson entering Rowland's car,

Evidence includes surveillance camera footage of Josephson entering Rowland’s car,

The evidence includes surveillance camera footage of Josephson entering Rowland’s car, as well as a witness who the prosecutors say watched Rowland clean the blade he allegedly used to repeatedly stab Josephson.

Fifth Circuit Solicitor Byron Gipson said cameras in the entertainment district captured Rowland circling the block multiple times in his black Chevrolet Impala before pulling up to Josephson, who was waiting alone. 

Josephson got into the car, and it was the last time she was seen alive, the prosecutor said. 

‘As she stood there waiting for that Uber, he had his eyes firmly transfixed on her,’ Gipson said.

‘It’s those intentional deliberate, heinous, cruel and malicious acts that Nathaniel David Rowland has been indicted for kidnapping Samantha Josephson. He’s been indicted for murdering Samantha Josephson,’ Gipson said, according to NBC. 

Fifth Circuit Solicitor Byron Gipson (left) and deputy April Sampson confer during a break in the trial of Nathaniel Rowland in the Richland County Courthouse on July 20 in Columbia, South Carolina

Fifth Circuit Solicitor Byron Gipson (left) and deputy April Sampson confer during a break in the trial of Nathaniel Rowland in the Richland County Courthouse on July 20 in Columbia, South Carolina

Judge Clifton Newman is presiding over the trial of Nathaniel Rowland in Richland County Court, South Carolina

Judge Clifton Newman is presiding over the trial of Nathaniel Rowland in Richland County Court, South Carolina

Once inside, Josephson was trapped because Rowland had turned on the backseat child locks so the doors could only be opened from the outside, prosecutors said.

Alicia Goode, one of Rowland’s public defenders, said the law-school bound college student fought back, yet none of the DNA evidence gathered from the victim matches Rowland. 

‘Zero: that’s the amount of DNA on Samantha Josephson´s body that matches Nathaniel’s,’ Goode said. ‘Zero. It’s not on her clothing, not under her ripped and torn fingernails, it’s not on her ankles.’

After opening statements from the prosecution and defense, witnesses began testimony in front of jurors Tuesday afternoon.

Nathaniel David Rowland, 24, (left)who has been charged in the murder and kidnapping of University of South Carolina senior Samantha Josephson, 21, was linked to another kidnapping five months prior

Josephson was murdered on March 29 when she mistakenly got into the wrong car, thinking it was her Uber and was attacked

The trial of Nathaniel David Rowland, 24, (left) who was charged in the 2019 murder and kidnapping of University of South Carolina senior Samantha Josephson, 21,  (right), started on Tuesday

Defense attorney Alicia Goode delivers opening arguments during the trial of Nathaniel Rowland on July 20

Defense attorney Alicia Goode delivers opening arguments during the trial of Nathaniel Rowland on July 20

Fifth Circuit solicitor Byron Gipson delivers an opening statement during the trial of Nathaniel Rowland in Richland County Court on July 20

Fifth Circuit solicitor Byron Gipson delivers an opening statement during the trial of Nathaniel Rowland in Richland County Court on July 20

Josephson’s death in 2019 drew national attention to safety concerns about ride-hailing services and prompted changes. 

South Carolina lawmakers enacted a measure that requires drivers to make license plate numbers visible in the front of their vehicles and creates criminal penalties for people who impersonate ride-hailing drivers. 

Josephson's death rocked her school and home communities in 2019 as hundreds mourned her loss at a vigil in 2010

Josephson’s death rocked her school and home communities in 2019 as hundreds mourned her loss at a vigil in 2010

source: dailymail.co.uk