News

Crystal Mangum Admits She Lied About Duke Lacrosse Players Raping Her: "I Made Up A Story That Wasn't True"

Crystal Mangum is asking for forgiveness after falsely accusing three innocent men of rape – but many feel it's too late and should be punished for ruining their lives.

By Meredith Evans2 min read
Let's Talk with Cat

Crystal Mangum has admitted to ruining the lives of three innocent men.

On camera, in an interview with Let’s Talk With Kat, Mangum confessed to fabricating the now-infamous story of being raped by three Duke University lacrosse players during a team party. “[I] made up a story that wasn’t true,” she said plainly. Viewers think she has zero remorse.

People are calling for her to pay for her crimes, but there’s nothing the legal system can do about it. The statute of limitations for perjury in North Carolina ran out years ago, so Mangum gets to confess to her crimes with zero chance of punishment. Meanwhile, David Evans, Collin Finnerty, and Reade Seligmann – the three men she falsely accused – lost years of their lives, their reputations dragged through the mud, their futures ruined. 

The Lies That Ruined Lives

The country was gripped by the story of a Black exotic dancer accusing three white college athletes of a racially motivated gang rape in 2006. Then-Durham County District Attorney Mike Nifong declared publicly that a “sexual assault took place,” adding that it was “deeply racially motivated.”

There is not even a shred of DNA evidence to suggest those men had been near Mangum. But the damage was already done. Still, Duke University suspended the players, fired their coach, and canceled the team’s season. Evans, Finnerty, and Seligmann were indicted and faced up to 30 years in prison before the case fell apart in 2007 due to lack of evidence.

Now, almost 20 years later, Mangum is asking for forgiveness. “I testified falsely against them by saying that they raped me when they didn’t, and that was wrong,” she said in the interview. “And I betrayed the trust of a lot of other people who believed in me and made up a story that wasn't true. Because I wanted validation from people and not from God. And that was wrong. And I hope that they can forgive me.” 

Mangum’s admission is a gut punch to the family of the Duke Lacrosse players. Where is the justice? She’ll never see a courtroom for the lies she told. Even if the three men attempted to go back to their normal lives, false rape accusations don’t just fade away. Google their names, and the first hits are still tied to the word “rape.” 

This isn’t Mangum’s only crime. Since the Duke lacrosse case, she’s been convicted of second-degree murder for stabbing her boyfriend in 2011. Before that, she nearly burned down her own home with her three children inside. She is not someone who’s only made one bad choice; it’s clear that Mangum has a pattern of destruction.

Mangum’s lies did more than ruin the lives of three men. She just undermined the trust of victims of sexual assault. Every false accusation gives ammunition to those who already doubt survivors. 

Personal trainer and commentator @Aja_Cortes made a great point on X, explaining that cases like this set the stage for a “poisoned well” in modern gender dynamics. Young men grow up hearing stories like this, and they learn to keep their distance. Don’t flirt. Don’t approach. Don’t risk it. The stakes are just too high. And now, women wonder where all the “real men” have gone.

Another user noted the racial undertones of this case, calling it “purely racial” and pointing out how the media and legal system were quick to destroy the lives of white men based on accusations from a Black woman.

Real victims deserve every ounce of support we can give them. But so do the falsely accused, whose lives are ripped apart by lies they had no way to defend against. As for Mangum, she’ll spend the rest of her life in prison for murder, not for the lies that destroyed three men’s lives. It’s a hollow consolation. But maybe it’s the only justice we’re ever going to get.

Subscribe today to get unlimited access to all of Evie’s premium content.