Texas Girl Who Was Kidnapped From Basketball Game Describes Horrors Of Being Held By Traffickers
Natalee Cramer is ready to tell her story more than two years after being kidnapped and held by a gang of sex traffickers. She was abducted in April 2022 when she went to watch a Dallas Mavericks basketball game with her father at age 15.
Trigger warning: sexual abuse, sex trafficking
Theteenager from Dallas, Texas, left her seat at the American Airlines Center without her phone and told her father she was going to the bathroom. At that time, she was having a “craving” for weed she consumed to cope with her anxiety.
- Natalee Cramer recounted being kidnapped from a Dallas Mavericks game in 2022 and raped at age 15.
- She was lured by a stranger at the Texas basketball game and held by traffickers, who later took her to a hotel in Oklahoma.
- Natalee's parents used a private investigator to find her; the teen's case led to eight arrests.
“I just walk around, and that’s when I caught that guy’s eye,” Natalee, now 18, recalled during an interview with WFAA. “I told him, ‘I’m just really looking to smoke. Do you smoke?'”
Natalee Cramer opened up about being kidnapped from a basketball game she attended with her father in Dallas, Texas, and subsequently trafficked at a hotel

Image credits: CBS TEXAS
The man replied that he did smoke and offered to give her some marijuana he had in his car that was parked in the garage.
“He didn’t tell me there was anyone else there with him,” she said. “It was just him. He told me we would walk back to his car that was parked in the parking lot…in the garage…and that’s when the second guy came.”
Natalee was forced into the car and taken to a house in North Texas, where theabusers raped her.
Natalee was abducted in a car in April 2022 after speaking with a man at a Dallas Mavericks game in the American Airlines Center
Image credits: CBS TEXAS
“It’s not like a guy with candy in the back of his van, and you just get thrown in the back of the van. It looks like a normal conversation until it’s not.
“You don’t know you’re in danger until you’re in the middle of it, and you don’t know what to do, and you can’t get out.
“There’s no room to judge people because they can’t get out. If they could leave, they would,” the teenager added, responding to those who blamed her for what she has endured.
After multiple days, Natalee was taken toOklahoma, where the abusers left her with another group of criminals who trafficked her at a hotel.
Image credits: CBS TEXAS
She was paralyzed with fear and thought that she would be punished if she tried to escape.
“It clicked for me that I was in danger when I was raped by them. I knew I was in danger by then, but I did not know how to leave because I was scared.
“I could have asked for the phone, but they would have been right there. What was I supposed to do? Even if I had run, where would I go? I didn’t know where I was.”
“It’s not like a guy with candy in the back of his van, and you just get thrown in the back of the van. It looks like a normal conversation until it’s not,” the teen explained
Though she did not want to take a risk by running away, Natalee still hoped that witnesses at the scene wouldreport the case to the police and rescue her.
When she revealed to workers at the hotel that she had been raped, the teen said the staff told her that there wasn’t anything they could do.
“They told me they couldn’t help me. They didn’t know how to help me.
“I was more surprised to see afamily with small children there and they looked me in the eyes and could see that all of these people were older than me and still not say anything.
“The dad of these little children looked at me, and he couldn’t tell at the hotel. [The man who trafficked her] had a whole rifle by his side, and the family just walked on like nothing happened.”
The men who abducted Natalee raped her and drove her to Oklahoma, where they left her with another group who trafficked her at an extended-stay hotel
Image credits: CBS TEXAS
“I was just praying to God. I’m tired. I can’t do this anymore. I need someone. Please send someone.”
That someone was a police officer who identified her when she was walking outside of an apartment complex.
On the night Natalee disappeared, her father, Kyle Morris, was told by a Dallas police officer working at the arena that he had to report the case to the North Richland Hills Police Department, which is more than 30 miles (48 kilometers) away from the game because that is where the family lived.
Her parents were reportedly referred to a private investigator in Houston,Texas, who found photos of Natalee in online sex ads and traced them to Oklahoma City.
Image credits: WFAA
They shared the information with the Oklahoma City Police Department, and officers began conducting the search in the area. Natalee was found eleven days after her disappearance.
“He pulled up next to me, and he’s like, ‘Are you Natalee Cramer?’ and I was like, ‘Yes.'”
Eight people were arrested that day in Oklahoma, two of whom pleaded guilty to trafficking and child porn charges, according toDallas Express. All were later sentenced to time in prison.
Additionally, Natalee’s family filed a lawsuit against the companies that own and manage the extended-stay hotel where she was trafficked, detailing surveillance camera footage showing the 15-year-old victim in the hallway with the armed men.
Surveillance footage from the arena shows Natalee walking with a man before being kidnapped
Image credits: WFAA
Image credits: WFAA
“On one occasion, a hotel employee saw the 15-year-old victim crying in the lobby while two adult men escorted her to their room and yet did nothing,” the family’s attorney, Zeke Fortenberry, claimed in anews release, the outlet reported.
“Other times, men patrolled the hotel hallway with an AK-47 style assault rifle.”
According to the lawsuit, the hotel rented at least two different rooms to 44-year-old Kenneth Nelson, a registered sex offender.
Eleven days after Natalee’s disappearance, eight people were arrested and sentenced to prison
Image credits: FOX 4 Dallas-Fort Worth
“This is my life, and they have ruined my life. I cannot feel sorry for them because they did not feel sorry for me,” Natalee said about the arrests.
Her family continues to fight for the men whokidnapped the teen in Dallas to be charged and jailed.
Last year, the Dallas County grand jury threw out the charges of sexual assault of a child against 33-year-old Emanual Cartagena, the man accused of luring Natalee away from the game.
“I was extremely upset,” Natalee’s mother, Brooke Morris,expressed.
“Our attorney had additional evidence that he was trying to present to the district attorney’s office in Dallas, and we were outright told in a nutshell, ‘thank you for the additional evidence, but we are not going to be presenting to the grand jury again.'”
Natalee said her memory is enough evidence to confirm what she experienced.
“I can recall all of the things they did. All of the things they were wearing and all of the things they said and did to me. All three of them are guilty, and if I could see all three, I would be able to point them out.”
Natalee and her family started Aisling, a non-profit organization that provides support for survivors of sex trafficking and sexual assault
The family startedAisling, a non-profit organization that provides support and resources for survivors of sex trafficking and sexual assault.
“I want to make a pathway for people to feel comfortable and emotionally safe to talk to people and come forward,” Natalee explained. “If they can’t speak for them, I’m going to speak for them.”
The 18-year-old is working on hermental health in therapy, living on her own, and pursuing her General Educational Development Test (GED).
According to 2022 data from the United Nations, 4.9 million women and girls worldwide are victims of forced commercial sexual exploitation. Estimates suggest that women and girls may constitute up to 80% of persons trafficked globally.
“She was a naive kid. Traffickers took advantage of her,” one reader wrote
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I want to punch the person that said it was her own decisions that are to "blame", like she chose the trafficking!
Yep because a 15 year child is at fault for the actions of the men who are the perpetrators of this crime. This makes me so angry. She should have been safe to walk anywhere and do anything and make all the mistakes that teens do and not have had to suffer this fate because a group of f*****g perverted men think they are entitled to rape.
Load More Replies...The commenter who said she "is truly blessed" I want to punch them the f*****g face. It is not truly blessed to be kidnapped, held at gunpoint and raped repeatedly for 11 days.
I'm sure the person meant truly blessed for having been found. Most of these young girls who are trafficked are never heard from again.
Load More Replies..."Her own bad decisions are to blame" The only people to blame are her kidnappers and rapists. There are plenty of victims who were doing nothing more than walking to the store or going to visit the bathroom etc. There are decisions you can make that will make you more vulnerable but by blaming someone for being more vulnerable you are doing nothing but making excuses for rapists and criminals. I'm not saying people shouldn't teach their children to be more aware and to avoid situations that will make them more vulnerable to predators but there is NOTHING she could have done to deserve what happened to her and anyone who thinks otherwise is dangerously close to thinking exactly like the people who did this to her. The more blame you place on ANY victim of kidnapping and S.A. the more ALL victims will be blamed whether or not they were in a vulnerable position...how can people not see this!?
I wish I could update this more than once. Nothing, I repeat NOTHING, justifies what happened to this girl. She wasn't "asking for it", what she was wearing didn't matter, what she said didn't matter, the fact that she was looking for smoke didn't matter. She was taken and forced to have sex against her will. She's the victim and it's not her fault. Period.
Load More Replies...My daughter and I experienced much the same thing, when she was barely 14. She wasn't lured by d***s - for those who can't seem to get past that angle - she accepted an offer of a ride. And yes, she should have known better than to get into a vehicle with someone she didn't really know, but there were contextual reasons she felt safe doing so. She was later drugged by her captors. Luckily, they weren't very bright people - they had her call me, telling me a story to make me think she was consenting to her situation, but I could hear a woman in the background dictating what she was supposed to say. And they didn't block their phone number, which was linked to online ads for s*xual services. So I called back. I hounded them. I made calls from other numbers as a potential customer, trying to track them down. They realized that she wasn't the at-risk kid they had taken her for, with no one to fight for her, and that I wasn't going to give up. After four days, they let her go.
The police were worse than useless. When I reported my 14 year old, Indigenous daughter missing, with evidence that she was being trafficked, the officer asked me, "How do you know she isn't doing this willingly?" I knew, but it shouldn't have mattered - she was too young to consent and being exploited. While she was being held, officers went to the door to inform her captor that she was in violation of a restraining order taken out by a previous victim staying at the same hotel, but didn't look in the room or notice the drugged, current victim. And after she came home, the officers who followed up were clearly only concerned about their own careers - one of them actually said to me, "Do you know how big a case this could be?!" with dollar signs in her eyes, as if her promotion would motivate me. When my daughter was too scared to identify her captors, they threatened to charge her, the 14-year-old victim. Which was when I had to say, we're done here, you can't victimize her again.
Load More Replies...I’m so angry at all the “she was dumb/foolish/her fault/bad choices.” She was a CHILD.
BoredPanda, I think you are utterly disgusting to tagline this article with a random quote from a random a*****e blaming this child for the horrific crimes committed upon her.
Why? We need to know these f*****s exist. It is their duty to share the story and the unhinged reactions of some ppl trying to justify this injustice. the tagline showcases some of the unhinged f***s in this world that we need to deal with. Cant put our heads in the ground like ostriches. That is the kind of mentality that perpetuates traffikers...they need to be killed. Or shamed before they become one.
Load More Replies...While it's really good to highlight a case like this to remind people to be safe (don't go with a stranger to their car), it's worth remembering that the vast majority of sex trafficking is nothing like this. You are much more likely to be pimped our by someone you know, for example a manipulative or abusive boyfriend who then starts getting his friends involved. The podcast You're Wrong About did a great episode on this. Actual kidnappings like this are thankfully very rare
Some children are trafficked by their own parents. What's more horrible than that? How do you escape the people who are supposed to care about you, clothe you, feed you, house you? THIS IS WHY there is no degree of "blame the victim" that is ethical, wise or kind. Trafficking should NOT EXIST, PERIOD. ALL TRAFFICKERS SHOULD BE ERADICATED WITH EXTREME PREJUDICE, BY ANY MEANS NECESSARY.
Load More Replies...i retired from law enforcement. within the purview of my job i was required to do home visits in areas that were not safe for a lone woman and/or a white person to be in. (no racism meant by that-it was just a fact that any non-person of color was suspect in specific areas.) the 'advise' that was given to me was to do visits before 11am because most of the people in those neighborhoods were either at work or just getting up, meaning not drinking/smoking, etc. i always felt it wasn't very useful. but, the one thing i came across was the phrase: perfect paranoia is perfect awareness. i scoffed at this in the beginning but it saved my butt on several occasions. it's a terrible thing when we want to teach our kids to have compassion & faith in humanity in one breath and then to fear and suspect strangers in the next. this girl was naive but not at fault for her plight. stop the victim blaming.
I want to punch the person that said it was her own decisions that are to "blame", like she chose the trafficking!
Yep because a 15 year child is at fault for the actions of the men who are the perpetrators of this crime. This makes me so angry. She should have been safe to walk anywhere and do anything and make all the mistakes that teens do and not have had to suffer this fate because a group of f*****g perverted men think they are entitled to rape.
Load More Replies...The commenter who said she "is truly blessed" I want to punch them the f*****g face. It is not truly blessed to be kidnapped, held at gunpoint and raped repeatedly for 11 days.
I'm sure the person meant truly blessed for having been found. Most of these young girls who are trafficked are never heard from again.
Load More Replies..."Her own bad decisions are to blame" The only people to blame are her kidnappers and rapists. There are plenty of victims who were doing nothing more than walking to the store or going to visit the bathroom etc. There are decisions you can make that will make you more vulnerable but by blaming someone for being more vulnerable you are doing nothing but making excuses for rapists and criminals. I'm not saying people shouldn't teach their children to be more aware and to avoid situations that will make them more vulnerable to predators but there is NOTHING she could have done to deserve what happened to her and anyone who thinks otherwise is dangerously close to thinking exactly like the people who did this to her. The more blame you place on ANY victim of kidnapping and S.A. the more ALL victims will be blamed whether or not they were in a vulnerable position...how can people not see this!?
I wish I could update this more than once. Nothing, I repeat NOTHING, justifies what happened to this girl. She wasn't "asking for it", what she was wearing didn't matter, what she said didn't matter, the fact that she was looking for smoke didn't matter. She was taken and forced to have sex against her will. She's the victim and it's not her fault. Period.
Load More Replies...My daughter and I experienced much the same thing, when she was barely 14. She wasn't lured by d***s - for those who can't seem to get past that angle - she accepted an offer of a ride. And yes, she should have known better than to get into a vehicle with someone she didn't really know, but there were contextual reasons she felt safe doing so. She was later drugged by her captors. Luckily, they weren't very bright people - they had her call me, telling me a story to make me think she was consenting to her situation, but I could hear a woman in the background dictating what she was supposed to say. And they didn't block their phone number, which was linked to online ads for s*xual services. So I called back. I hounded them. I made calls from other numbers as a potential customer, trying to track them down. They realized that she wasn't the at-risk kid they had taken her for, with no one to fight for her, and that I wasn't going to give up. After four days, they let her go.
The police were worse than useless. When I reported my 14 year old, Indigenous daughter missing, with evidence that she was being trafficked, the officer asked me, "How do you know she isn't doing this willingly?" I knew, but it shouldn't have mattered - she was too young to consent and being exploited. While she was being held, officers went to the door to inform her captor that she was in violation of a restraining order taken out by a previous victim staying at the same hotel, but didn't look in the room or notice the drugged, current victim. And after she came home, the officers who followed up were clearly only concerned about their own careers - one of them actually said to me, "Do you know how big a case this could be?!" with dollar signs in her eyes, as if her promotion would motivate me. When my daughter was too scared to identify her captors, they threatened to charge her, the 14-year-old victim. Which was when I had to say, we're done here, you can't victimize her again.
Load More Replies...I’m so angry at all the “she was dumb/foolish/her fault/bad choices.” She was a CHILD.
BoredPanda, I think you are utterly disgusting to tagline this article with a random quote from a random a*****e blaming this child for the horrific crimes committed upon her.
Why? We need to know these f*****s exist. It is their duty to share the story and the unhinged reactions of some ppl trying to justify this injustice. the tagline showcases some of the unhinged f***s in this world that we need to deal with. Cant put our heads in the ground like ostriches. That is the kind of mentality that perpetuates traffikers...they need to be killed. Or shamed before they become one.
Load More Replies...While it's really good to highlight a case like this to remind people to be safe (don't go with a stranger to their car), it's worth remembering that the vast majority of sex trafficking is nothing like this. You are much more likely to be pimped our by someone you know, for example a manipulative or abusive boyfriend who then starts getting his friends involved. The podcast You're Wrong About did a great episode on this. Actual kidnappings like this are thankfully very rare
Some children are trafficked by their own parents. What's more horrible than that? How do you escape the people who are supposed to care about you, clothe you, feed you, house you? THIS IS WHY there is no degree of "blame the victim" that is ethical, wise or kind. Trafficking should NOT EXIST, PERIOD. ALL TRAFFICKERS SHOULD BE ERADICATED WITH EXTREME PREJUDICE, BY ANY MEANS NECESSARY.
Load More Replies...i retired from law enforcement. within the purview of my job i was required to do home visits in areas that were not safe for a lone woman and/or a white person to be in. (no racism meant by that-it was just a fact that any non-person of color was suspect in specific areas.) the 'advise' that was given to me was to do visits before 11am because most of the people in those neighborhoods were either at work or just getting up, meaning not drinking/smoking, etc. i always felt it wasn't very useful. but, the one thing i came across was the phrase: perfect paranoia is perfect awareness. i scoffed at this in the beginning but it saved my butt on several occasions. it's a terrible thing when we want to teach our kids to have compassion & faith in humanity in one breath and then to fear and suspect strangers in the next. this girl was naive but not at fault for her plight. stop the victim blaming.

















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