Krystal Whipple Murders Nhu Nguyen

Krystal Whipple is a killer from Nevada who was convicted of the murder of Nhu Nguyen

According to court documents Krystal Whipple had just finished having her nails done at Crystal Nails and Spa in Las Vegas and attempted to leave without paying. Nail salon owner Nhu Nguyen attempted to stop her and she would be run over by a vehicle driven by Whipple. Nguyen would die from her injuries

Krystal Whipple would be arrested, plead guilty and was sentenced to ten to twenty five years in prison

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Krystal Whipple Case

A Las Vegas woman was sentenced Friday to 10 to 25 years in prison for killing a nail salon manager with a vehicle while trying to skip out on a $35 manicure

Krystal Whipple in December pleaded guilty to second-degree murder, admitting she killed Nhu “Annie” Ngoc Nguyen, a 51-year-old mother of three from Garden Grove, California, in December 2018.

Clark County District Court Judge Tierra Jones sentenced Whipple, whose plea allowed her to avoid trial on felony murder, burglary, robbery and stolen vehicle charges.

Police said Whipple, 23, tried to pay for her manicure with a fraudulent credit card before telling Nguyen that she was going to her car to get cash.

Nguyen and her boyfriend followed Whipple into the parking lot, where Nguyen was struck and dragged by a black Chevrolet Camaro driven by Whipple. Police later said the car had been stolen from a rental agency.

Authorities said Whipple fled to Boulder City and then Los Angeles before surrendering to police in the Phoenix suburb of Glendale, Arizona, almost two weeks after Nguyen’s death.

https://ktla.com/news/nationworld/las-vegas-woman-sentenced-for-killing-nail-salon-manager-from-garden-grove-over-35-bill/

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Christy Le said relatives from Orange County, California, traveled to Las Vegas to visit her mother shortly before the woman’s death.

“Quality time was something my mom would have been anticipating for a long time,” Le told a judge on Friday. “No one would have known, though, that the rare occasion that our family gathered for my mom’s sake would be our final moments with her.”

Le said Nhu “Annie” Ngoc Nguyen often worked 12 to 14 hours a day, seven days a week as a manager of a Las Vegas nail salon. Nguyen died in December 2018 after being struck by a stolen rental car and dragged through the salon’s parking lot.

District Judge Tierra Jones sentenced Krystal Whipple on Friday to a prison term of 10 to 25 years for the killing.

Whipple, 23, who pleaded guilty in December to second-degree murder, offered no statement at her sentencing hearing. She initially faced burglary, robbery and stolen vehicle charges in connection with the death.

Nguyen, a manager at Crystal Nails & Spa, 4983 W. Flamingo Road, was dragged about 50 feet outside the salon after Whipple sped away from a declined credit card payment for a $35 manicure. The manager had followed Whipple outside the salon after the woman said she wanted to retrieve money from her vehicle.

Prosecutors said Whipple fled to Boulder City then Los Angeles with fake identification before driving to Arizona, and planned to travel as far as North Carolina before her arrest in January 2019.

At Friday’s hearing, Le told the judge through a video feed that Nguyen, a Vietnamese refugee, raised her and her sisters as a single mother, always thinking of her children first.

“She was the epitome of selflessness and always assumed responsibility as the head of the household,” said Le, the victim’s youngest daughter. “My greatest regret is not being able to take off that baggage for her, and to make her proud of what I’ve accomplished through her. My achievements are her achievements, and I want her to know that her efforts were not wasted. We all miss her very much.”

The salon manager and her boyfriend followed Whipple outside to stop her, authorities said, but the woman got behind the wheel of a stolen black Camaro and struck Nguyen, dragging the 51-year-old across the parking lot.

In handing down Whipple’s sentence, District Judge Tierra Jones called Nguyen’s death “nothing short of a tragedy.”

“This is just absolutely horrifying that someone lost their life just trying to work and provide services to someone,” the judge said.

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