The parents of the man accused of murdering a University of South Carolina student who was killed after getting into a car she thought was her Uber said he must “pay the consequences” if he’s found guilty, but they claim he didn’t do it.

“He’s a good kid,” Nathaniel Rowland’s father, Henry, said alongside his wife, Loretta, during an interview with WACH at their South Carolina home. “Ain’t no way in the world he could do this. The only thing I could ask since the day he was locked up: Did he do this?”

He continued: “I know it’s my child, but if you’re wrong, you’re wrong — period. There’s no ifs, ands or buts about it — you got to pay the consequences.”

Turkey hunters found 21-year-old Samantha Josephson’s body on Friday afternoon in Clarendon County, just over 12 hours after she was spotted getting into a car outside a bar in Columbia, South Carolina’s Five Points area. Rowland, 24, was busted Saturday and charged with murder and kidnapping.

Authorities said the New Jersey native, whose funeral is Wednesday, died of multiple stab wounds.

Henry Rowland also spoke directly to Josephson’s family, expressing remorse for their loss.

“My heart goes out to the family that lost a life,” Rowland continued. “I feel so bad, but my son didn’t do it. He did not do this thing.”

Rowland — who claimed his son was passed out at a party the night of the murder — said the “truth will come to light” in the case.

Rowland’s mother, meanwhile, said she spoke to her son on Monday. He remains held without bail until a bond hearing, which has not yet been scheduled.

“He is not a bad young man,” Loretta Rowland told the station. “He said that wasn’t him, and I believe him.”