Mystikal Faces Civil Lawsuit From the Woman He Pleaded Guilty to Raping

Mystikal, now serving 20 years after a guilty plea, is being sued in civil court by the woman who says he attacked and raped her at his Prairieville home.

Already shackled to a 20-year sentence after last weeks guilty plea, Mystikal is now contending with a parallel legal battle: the woman who accused him has moved forward with a civil lawsuit, according to a TMZ report published Monday (June 22).

The filing lays out a harrowing account of what the plaintiff says happened at the rappers Prairieville, La., home. The suit alleges that the visit turned violent after Mystikal accused her of stealing money and erupted into what the document describes as a drug-fueled rage. The complaint alleges he spat on her, threw rubbing alcohol on her in an attempt to cleanse her of “bad spirits,” punched, kicked and choked her, pulled a patch out of her hair, forced her to pray with him and then raped her.

The civil suit claims the woman has endured both physical injuries and long-term emotional distress. The filing does not specify the amount of damages she is seeking. XXL has reached out to Mystikals attorney for comment.

“If I did that to you, I deserve the max sentence,” Mystikal told the court after the victim delivered her impact statement, according to reporting from the criminal proceedings.

That courtroom exchange pointed up a grim continuity in the rappers legal history. The former No Limit artist is now facing his second major incarceration related to sex crimes: he previously served six years after pleading guilty to sexual battery and extortion in 2003. A 2017 rape charge was later dropped due to insufficient evidence.

With this most recent guilty plea and the continuing civil action, Mystikals case sits at the uncomfortable intersection of criminal punishment and private redress. The civil lawsuit runs on a separate track from the criminal conviction and seeks to hold him accountable in a different legal forum for the same underlying conduct.

For cultural context, Mystikals twenty-year term lands him among a lineage of hip-hop figures who have faced lengthy prison sentences, joining names like C-Murder, Max B and B.G. in the broader conversation about incarceration and the rap world.

As the civil litigation proceeds, key questions remain unanswered: the exact damages sought, the timetable for discovery and whether the suit will survive motions to dismiss. For now, the criminal conviction and the civil complaint together compound the legal fallout for a once-prominent artist whose career has been repeatedly interrupted by brushes with the law.

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