Colorado agent [and our very own Scott Eicher] details texts between Keslie Schelling and Donthe Lucas

Monday, February 8, 2020 | by Zach Hillstrom – The Pueblo Chieftain |

The homicide trial of Donthe Lucas, accused of first-degree murder in the 2013 disappearance of his pregnant girlfriend, Kelsie Schelling, resumed Monday with the testimony of Colorado Bureau of Investigation Agent Kevin Torres.

Torres, continuing his testimony from Friday, began the fourth day of the trial by detailing alleged text exchanges between Lucas and Schelling on the night of Feb. 3 and the day of her disappearance Feb. 4, breaking them down minute-by-minute and hour-by-hour as the conversation unfolded.

The texts exchanged indicate Lucas and Schelling were constantly arguing throughout the night of Feb. 3, both in text and in short phone conversations in which Schelling seemed to continually hang up on Lucas.

Lucas appears to have asked Schelling to come down to Pueblo after she got off work the evening of Feb. 3, and expresses disappointment she will not drive down.

In the texts, Lucas implies Schelling had asked him to come to her OBGYN appointment the following day – the day of her disappearance – saying he wanted to go with her and noting it “seemed like” Schelling wanted him to go.

Schelling replied that she did want Lucas to accompany her to the doctor “until I realized that’s the last place you wanted to be.”

The argument between Schelling and Lucas, according to the exchanged texts as recounted by Torres, continued into the early morning hours of Feb. 4.

At 1:28 a.m., Schelling tells Lucas, “I won’t tell you anything about the baby. I won’t tell you about my appointment. We won’t speak of it again. Forget I’m pregnant, seriously.”

Just before 3 a.m., according to Torres’ testimony, Schelling texted Lucas, “You don’t have to be in a relationship with me. You don’t have to marry me. You don’t have to have a happy little family with me. You don’t have an obligation to me. You’re good. Don’t worry. Goodnight.”

Torres said Lucas replied, “Oh I know all of that …  thanks for stating it for me.”

Their argument continued through texts beyond 4 a.m.

Later that morning, Torres read texts from Schelling to Lucas that said, “I’m sorry for hanging up on you over and over. That was dumb and I apologize. I just get mad and I don’t want to fight with you. I love you very much and you know it. I’m sorry for hanging up on you … I truly am. Love you Donthe.”

Lucas and Schelling continue to exchange texts throughout the day of Feb. 4, beginning before her OBGYN appointment.

Schelling tells Lucas at 11:21 a.m. that she’s finished her appointment. He reportedly asks what the doctors told her and she replies that everything looked good and that her due date was Sept. 13.

Lucas, according to Torres’ recap of the text exchange, replied, “Cool,” then said he wished Schelling didn’t have to work that evening. He asks her to skip work and come to Pueblo to get him and they continue to argue.

Schelling tells Lucas, “I’m not going to come get you so we can fight all day.”

He responds: “I don’t want to fight at all I want to give you this.”

“Give me what?” Schelling asks.

“Just wait and see for yourself,” Lucas allegedly says in the texts.

“You probably wouldn’t believe me if I told you anyway so you can see for yourself.”

Lucas and Schelling seem to allude to a trip Lucas was planning on taking that day, seemingly to Kansas, on which he asked Schelling to accompany him.

Lucas tells her to, “Just stop wasting time and come.”

Schelling tells him she has responsibilities and can’t just skip work.

Torres detailed a text from Lucas to Schelling just before noon that said, “Um, yeah you can if you weren’t scared to get fired. I told you I’d give you everything you need when you get here so u don’t need that job.”

Schelling goes to work that evening and she and Lucas continue to argue over text.

Before 6 p.m., Torres said Schelling texted Lucas, “Then step up and make a relationship with me work. Stop acting like you can’t do it. Either make things work with me or walk away.”

“OK. I plan to make things work. Are you still coming (down to Pueblo) after work? I’m not going today,” Lucas allegedly responded.

Torres said texts showed Schelling eventually agreed to come to Pueblo. Former FBI agent and cellular software expert Scott Eicher testified Friday that cell phone records showed Schelling’s movements that night — her phone, Eicher said, left the area of her employment in Denver, traveled south on Interstate 25 and eventually arrived in Pueblo.

Schelling texted Lucas at 8:50 p.m., saying, “I’m coming now. So be ready.”

At 9:19 p.m., Schelling texts Lucas to say that she’s in Monument. At 9:56 p.m., she texts again, saying, “Almost there. Where do I go?”

Lucas, according to Torres, directs her to go to Walmart. She texts him at 10:20 p.m., saying she’s arrived and Lucas replies that he’ll be there shortly.

But at 11:10 p.m., Lucas had still not arrived at Walmart. At 11:14 p.m., he changes plans and tells Schelling to meet him, “where you usually do,” seemingly referring to an intersection near his grandmother’s home where Schelling had picked him up on previous occasions.

She texts him at 11:18 p.m., saying she has arrived at the meeting spot. She texts again at 11:24 p.m., saying “Where are you? I’ve been here for over an hour just waiting.”

Deputy District Attorney Kyle McCarthy then skipped ahead to the communications exchanged the following day and asked Torres to read from texts that allegedly were exchanged between Donthe Lucas and his mother, Sara Lucas.

At 11:29 a.m. on Feb. 5, Torres said Lucas texted his mother, “Going to make sure she didn’t leave anything in the house. Then you can take her back home.”

Sara Lucas allegedly responded: “What happened?” and, “Are you OK?” to which Lucas responded, “Yeah. Great now.”

Sara Lucas asked Donthe, “She’s not pregnant?”

He responded: “Nothing. Just had to make sure I was right. Apparently she had a miscarriage yesterday.”

“Oh my god,” Torres said Sara Lucas replied.

“All lies,” Donthe said.

“I’m 100 percent positive.”

“OK. Love you,” Sara Lucas said. “You ready for a smoke and a pancake?”

“Hell yeah. Lol,” Torres said Donthe replied. “Let me get her out of here. Love you, too.”

Around the same time, texts were also being exchanged from Lucas and Schelling’s phones.

“If it’s really what happened I’m so sorry you had to go through that alone,” Lucas said in a text to Schelling.

“Wish you would have told me you knew it was very likely to happen so I could be prepared. Didn’t expect to feel like this now.”

While this text was being sent, Torres said Schelling’s phone was pinging off of a cell tower within the area of Canon National Bank, where Donthe Lucas was seen on camera withdrawing $400 from Schelling’s bank account while driving her 2011 Chevy Cruze.

Torres said in the surveillance video showing the cash withdrawal, Schelling cannot be seen in the vehicle.

Shortly before noon, other texts are exchanged between Lucas and Schelling’s phones, which the prosecution alleges were not actually sent by Schelling.

Using cell phone data from Lucas and Schelling’s phones, the prosecution believes both phones were in the same location as the texts were being exchanged.

One text from Schelling’s phone to Lucas’ at 11:56 a.m., said “After u get that money pick me up and stay out of my life!”

Another, sent at 11:59 a.m., said, “You can bring my car to Denver tonight. I have to go to the doctor. I don’t feel right. You can use the money and fill the car up…”

round that time, Torres said, is when Schelling’s car was parked at the South Side Walmart, as evidenced by surveillance video of the parking lot. The car was moved from that location the following morning, then showed up at St. Mary-Corwin Medical Center Feb. 9.

At 1:10 p.m., Lucas texts Schelling, saying that he will drop off her vehicle and asks if he should, “leave the keys in the visor?”

At 1:34 p.m., Lucas sends another text saying, “sorry again about the loss,” telling Schelling he will soon be going up to Denver to drop off her car.

Torres said Lucas never took the car to Denver. Her phone, according to Torres and Eicher, was also never recorded as having left Pueblo.

Read the full story here.

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