Crystal Mangum

Birthday July 18, 1978

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Durham, North Carolina, U.S.

Age 45 years old

Nationality United States

#26370 Most Popular

1978

Crystal Gail Mangum (born July 18, 1978) is an American former exotic dancer from Durham, North Carolina, United States, who has been incarcerated for murder since 2013.

1993

Mangum's father said he did not believe she was raped or injured, though her mother believed such an incident could have occurred—but not in 1993.

She thinks it is more likely to have happened when Crystal was 17 or 18 years old, shortly before she made the police report.

Mangum's ex-husband, Kenneth Nathanial McNeill, believed the incident occurred as she said it did.

1996

She attended Hillside High School, graduating in 1996.

In 1996, Mangum filed a police report alleging that three years earlier, when she was 14, she had been kidnapped by three assailants, driven to Creedmoor, North Carolina, and raped.

One of those she accused was her boyfriend, who was 21 at the time, which would constitute statutory rape.

She subsequently backed away from the charges, a move relatives claimed was motivated by fear for her life.

After graduation from high school in 1996, Mangum joined the US Navy.

She trained to operate radios and navigation technology.

While serving in the Navy, Mangum married McNeill.

Her marriage quickly broke down.

Mangum reported to police that her husband had threatened to kill her, but the charge was dismissed when she failed to appear in court.

She served for less than two years in the Navy before being discharged after becoming pregnant by a fellow sailor, with whom she went on to have another child.

2002

By 2002, Mangum had returned to Durham and was working as an exotic dancer.

In 2002, she was arrested on 10 charges after stealing the taxicab of a customer to whom she had given a lap dance.

This prompted a police pursuit at speeds of up to 70 miles per hour, occasionally in the wrong lane.

After being stopped, Mangum nearly ran over a police officer, succeeding only in hitting his patrol vehicle.

She was found to have a blood alcohol content of over twice the legal limit.

Ultimately, Mangum pleaded guilty to four counts: assault on a government official, larceny, speeding to elude arrest, and driving while impaired.

She served three weekends in jail, paid $4,200 in restitution and fees, and was given two years' probation.

2004

In 2004, Mangum earned an associate degree from Durham Technical Community College, and subsequently enrolled full-time at North Carolina Central University.

At the time of the rape allegations, she was in her second year, studying police psychology, and earning a 3.0 average.

2006

In 2006, she came to attention in national news reports for having made false allegations of rape against lacrosse players in the Duke lacrosse case.

Mangum's work in the sex industry as a black woman while the young men she accused were white generated extensive media interest and academic debate about race, class, gender, and the politicization of the justice system.

In March 2006, Mangum was hired as a stripper at a party organized by members of the Duke University men's lacrosse team.

After arriving in an intoxicated state, having earlier consumed alcohol and cyclobenzaprine, to perform with another stripper at a house rented by three of the team captains, she became involved in an argument with the occupants of the residence and subsequently left.

Mangum then became involved in an altercation with her fellow stripper that necessitated police assistance.

The officer who arrived on scene took her to a local drug and mental health center, where she was in the process of being involuntarily committed when, after being asked a leading question, she made a false allegation that she had been raped at the party.

District Attorney Mike Nifong, who was up for re-election, pursued the case despite questions about the credibility of Mangum, and conspired with a DNA lab director to withhold exculpatory evidence that would have cleared the lacrosse players of the rape accusations.

It took almost a year for the state's attorney general's office to dismiss the charges and declare that the players were innocent of the charges laid against them by Nifong.

2008

In 2008, Mangum published a memoir, The Last Dance for Grace: The Crystal Mangum Story, written with Vincent Clark.

The book gives an unsubstantiated version of events, and she continued to insist on the debunked claim that she was assaulted at the party.

Mangum claimed that the dropping of the case was politically motivated.

2010

Previously, in February 2010, she was charged with the attempted murder of her then live-in partner, Milton Walker, but was convicted of contributing to the delinquency of a juvenile, injury to personal property and resisting a public officer.

Mangum was born and grew up in Durham, North Carolina, the daughter of Travis Mangum, a truck driver, and his wife Mary.

She was the youngest of three children.

2013

In November 2013, she was found guilty of second-degree murder after she stabbed boyfriend Reginald Daye, who died 10 days after.

She argued that she acted in self-defense, saying that she feared Daye would kill her.

She was convicted and sentenced to 14 to 18 years in prison.