(CBS/AP) MORGANTOWN, W.Va. - The second teenage girl charged with plotting and pulling off the murder of her longtime best friend has been identified by prosecutors as Shelia Eddy, 16, and will be tried as an adult.
PICTURES: W. Va. teen allegedly killed by "friends"
PICTURES: Skylar Neese's best friends charged in her murder
Eddy's case was moved from juvenile to adult court in a closed-door hearing in Monongalia County Circuit Court. Prosecutor Marcia Ashdown announced in a press release that all further proceedings will be held in open court.
Eddy is charged along with classmate, 16-year-old Rachel Shoaf, with luring Skylar Neese out of her Star City home last summer, driving her into the Pennsylvania woods and stabbing her to death at an agreed-upon moment.
Shoaf has already pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and is awaiting sentencing. She told police the girls no longer wanted to be friends with Skylar, but the victim's parents believe there was more to it.
Prosecutors have said they plan to recommend a 20-year prison sentence for Shoaf and will oppose any move to have her sentenced as a juvenile. But she could get as many as 40 years under the law.
Shoaf's family issued a public apology but has made no further statements.
Dave Neese said the public identification of Eddy and the prospect of sitting through a trial do not bring him relief in his daughter's death.
"I don't want to hear the grisly details of how Skylar was murdered," he said. "I don't want to hear how she screamed and cried. But I do want these girls to get what they deserve."
Skylar, a University High School honors student, slipped out the window of her ground-floor bedroom last July 6 and never came home.
Surveillance video showed her getting into a car at the end of her street in a quiet residential neighborhood near West Virginia University. With no sign of fear, no money and no contact lenses, she apparently expected to return.
For nearly nine months, her parents searched for her - initially with the help of Eddy, whom they had thought of like another daughter. Mary Neese said Eddy had even helped hand out flyers in their neighborhood.
The break in the case came Jan. 3, when Shoaf finally told investigators the truth - and where to find the body.
Skylar's remains were found hidden under branches in a secluded spot in Wayne Township, Pa., near the unincorporated West Virginia community of Macdale.
Shoaf told police they'd been unable to bury her.
The cold, calculating nature of the crime shocked the small town of Star City. The transcript from Shoaf's plea hearing shows that fellow students had their suspicions about the case, perhaps long before adults, chattering on social media about all three girls. LINK
I suspect neither one of these girls will be so fresh-faced when they finally get out of prison.
Why is democracy held in such high esteem when it’s the enemy of the minority and makes all rights relative to the dictates of the majority? (Ron Paul,2012)