Fake Uber driver who 'kidnapped and killed a South Carolina student' was arrested for selling items stolen from another kidnapping five months earlier
The man who is accused of kidnapping and
killing a college student who mistakenly entered his car thinking it was
her Uber, has been linked to another kidnapping five months prior, it's
been revealed.
Nathaniel David
Rowland, 24, has been charged with the murder and kidnapping of
University of South Carolina student Samantha Josephson, 21.
He allegedly he locked her in his car and killed on March 29 after she mistakenly entered his vehicle at 2am, thinking it was her ride-share car home.
Resurfaced warrants and police documents show he was arrested on October 19, 2018
in Richland County, South Carolina for allegedly trying to sell items
stolen during another woman's kidnapping, according to WLTX.
A woman told Columbia police that two men
carjacked her while she was at a traffic light in Columbia. They
physically assaulted her and forced her to drive to an ATM to withdraw
money.
Then they made her drive to her home where they stole items and left the scene.
Cops say that just hours later some of those stolen items - including a Playstation 4 - showed up at a pawn shop.
Authorities tracked the stolen items sold at the shop back to Rowland and arrested him.
However, there was no indication that Rowland was involved in the carjacking itself.
He was charged with obtaining goods under false pretenses valued at $2,000 or less, according to the State Law Enforcement Division.
Rowland currently awaits a bond hearing set for April 22 for the murder and kidnapping charges in the murder of Josephson.
Authorities say she died suffering multiple stab wounds with a sharp object to the head, neck, face, upper body, leg and foot.
Her body was found dumped in Clarendon County, about 65 miles from where she was last seen.
Rowland was arrested at 3am on March 30 after police saw him driving a few blocks from Five Points, the bar where Josephson accidentally entered his car.
His parents insist that he is innocent and was at a party at the time of the attack.
They say he passed out at the party, woke up and found his car keys in his vehicle - its interior covered in blood.
However, authorities say they have surveillance video of Josephson entering Rowland's dark colored car.
The
night after Josephson's murder cops noticed Rowland's black Chevrolet
Impala two blocks from the bar where she was kidnapped and arrested him
after a short chase.Information provided by
https://www.msn.com/en-nz/news/world/revealed-fake-uber-driver-who-kidnapped-and-killed-a-south-carolina-student-was-arrested-for-selling-items-stolen-from-another-kidnapping-five-months-earlier/ar-BBVWs2g?li=BBqdg4K&;ocid=spartanntp