Former stripper and convicted murderer Crystal Mangum lied Thursday in an interview with Let's Talk with Cat, saying she was raped by Duke lacrosse players. he confessed.
“I gave false testimony against them, saying they raped me when they didn't, but that was wrong and I lost the trust of many others who believed me. I betrayed him,” Mangeum said. “(I) wanted validation from people, not God, so I made up stories that weren't true.”
Mangum, who is currently in prison for killing her boyfriend, falsely accused three Duke University players of raping her during a performance at a team party in March 2006. The players she accused were arrested, sparking a national debate and conversation about racism.
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Crystal Mangum, pictured in an August 2010 file photo, was at the center of the Duke University lacrosse scandal and was charged with stabbing a man in her Durham, North Carolina, apartment on April 3, 2011. Ta. (Chuck Liddy/Raleigh News Observer/MCT)
All three players, David Evans, Colin Finnerty, and Reid Seligman, were acquitted. However, Mangum was not charged with perjury due to mental health issues.
Former North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper said at the time: “She may have actually believed the stories she's been telling.”
Mr. Mangum cannot currently be charged with perjury because the statute of limitations for perjury in North Carolina is only about two years.
The allegations forced the team to cancel a game against Georgetown in March 2008.
Former Durham County District Attorney Mike Nifong, who served as the lead prosecutor in the case, said in a March 2006 interview with CBS News that there was “no question that there was a sexual assault” and that it was “a racial assault.” “It was based on a moral motive.''
Crystal Gayle Mangum: Profile of Duke Rape Accuser

Crystal Gail Mangum attends a press conference to promote a book about her life on Thursday, October 23, 2008 in Durham, North Carolina. Mangum went on to say that she was assaulted in March 2006 at a party for the Duke University lacrosse team, where she was employed. To dance. (Chuck Liddy/Raleigh News Observer/MCT)
“From the information I have, I can conclude that rape did occur,” Nifong said. “The circumstances of the rape demonstrate that there are deep racial motives on the part of the acts committed, making a crime that is by its nature one of the most offensive and invasive crimes even more so. It is something.”
Nifong was subsequently disbarred by the North Carolina State Bar on June 16, 2007, for lying in court and withholding DNA evidence that would ultimately exonerate the defendants from liability for Mangum's allegations.
Ms. Mangum also claimed in her 2008 book titled Last Dance for Grace: The Crystal Mangum Story that “something” happened that night. .
“I will never say nothing happened that night,” she wrote.
Mangum was charged in March 2011 with first-degree murder and two counts of theft. A year earlier, he was convicted of a misdemeanor for setting his home, where he had three children, on fire and nearly burning it down. In a videotaped police interview, she told the officer she set up that she had gotten into an argument with her then-boyfriend (not Daye), burned her clothes, smashed her car windshield and threatened to stab her. spoke.
She was born July 18, 1978, the son of a truck driver, according to North Carolina Department of Corrections records. She grew up as the youngest of three children, not far from the home where she claims she was assaulted in 2006.
In 1993, at age 14, Mangum claimed three men kidnapped her, drove her to a home in Creedmoor, North Carolina, 25 miles from Durham, and raped her. She said one of the men was her then-boyfriend, a physically and emotionally abusive man who was seven years older than her.
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Crystal Mangum, pictured in an August 2010 file photo, is at the center of the Duke University lacrosse scandal, accused of stabbing a man in her apartment in Durham, North Carolina, in the early morning hours of Sunday, April 3, 2011. He was indicted. (Chuck Liddy/Raleigh News & Observer/MCT)
Creedmoor Police Chief Ted Pollard said Mangum filed a report on the incident on August 18, 1996, three years after the alleged rape occurred. However, the case was not pursued because the accuser withdrew the charges fearing for her life, according to her relatives.
Friend Vincent Clark, co-author of Mangum's self-published memoir, said he hopes people don't jump to judgment, echoing one of the oft-cited lessons of the lacrosse incident itself. .
Ms Clark said Ms Mangum was aware that she had mental health issues.
“I feel sad for her. I hope people understand how difficult it is to be her,” Clark said.
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