Defense: Ex-Va. Tech student's alleged accomplice was "deeply motivated" to kill

Killer App

CHRISTIANSBURG, Va. -- The accomplice of a former Virginia Tech student charged in the stabbing death of a 13-year-old girl in January had a fascination with knives and was "deeply motivated" to kill the teen, a defense attorney said Tuesday.

At the opening of David Eisenhauer's murder trial, his attorney John Lichtenstein tried to shift the jury's focus to his friend and alleged accomplice, Natalie Keepers, who will go on trial later this year.

Eisenhauer is accused of making a "secret date" with Nicole Lovell after meeting the teen through Kik, an instant messaging app. Nicole, a middle school student from Blacksburg, sneaked out of her bedroom window to meet Eisenhauer, who was then an engineering student at the nearby campus. On Jan. 27, 2016, Eisenhauer stabbed Nicole 14 times and cut her throat because he was worried his relationship with the underage girl would be exposed, prosecutors said.

Commonwealth's Attorney Mary Pettitt said he left her in the woods, in the snow, to die after he stabbed her.

"He has a problem and his problem is Nicole Lovell," Pettitt said.

Eisenhauer's DNA was found under Nicole's fingernails and her blood was found in the trunk of his car, the prosecutor said.

"48 Hours" investigated the case in the episode, "Killer App."  

David Eisenhauer and Natalie Keepers: A dark duo?

Eisenhauer's attorney sought to blame Keepers, who has been charged as an accessory and is scheduled to go on trial in September. Keepers has told police she was not present for the killing. She faces charges of being an accessory before the fact and concealing a body.

"The evidence in the case will be that the presence of someone else at that scene and the presence of someone else who was deeply motivated to commit that murder will leave you with that reasonable doubt," Lichtenstein said.

Nicole Lovell's family: Be your kids' eyes and ears

Eisenhauer's lawyer told jurors that Eisenhauer wanted to wipe his phone history clean, but it was Keepers who "wanted to talk" about killing Lovell. She was "exhilarated" and "excited" when she discussed killing Lovell with Eisenhauer, the attorney said.

"It was Natalie Keepers who said she wanted a more permanent solution," Lichtenstein said.

Keepers, also an engineering student at Virginia Tech, told police Eisenhauer claimed he met Lovell at a party and may have had sex with her, but could not remember because he blacked out. Keepers told police Eisenhauer feared the girl could be pregnant.

Defendant David Eisenhauer enters Montgomery County Circuit Court in Christiansburg Va., Tuesday, Feb. 6, 2018. Eisenhauer is accused of killing 13-year-old Nicole Madison Lovell on Jan. 27, 2016.  Matt Gentry / AP

Lovell's mother Tammy Weeks was the first witness called by prosecutors.

Weeks said she went to her daughter's bedroom and found a nightstand pushed up against the door and her window open. She said she immediately started calling her daughter's friends, then drove to the police station.

When a prosecutor asked Weeks when was the next time she saw her daughter, she replied: "In her coffin."

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