NYC dominatrix Viktoria Nasyrova’s victim looked like ‘vegetables’ after poison cheesecake

The lash stylist, who was allegedly fed a slice of poisoned cheesecake by a Russian dominatrix, “looked like a vegetable” and could barely move her eyes when her sister found her, the sister testified in court in Queens on Wednesday.

Speaking through a Russian interpreter, Iryna Kozachenko, 35, described finding her sister Olga Tsvyk nearly passed out at her home in Forest Hills, with dozens of pills on the floor of her second-floor bedroom.

“She felt very bad and she just looked at me, she looked like a vegetable,” Kozachenko told jurors. “She was very tired. She could hardly move her eyes. It looked like she was sleeping.”

Her sister tried to communicate with her but couldn’t really move, Kozachenko testified.

“I also noticed that there were pills near the bed, under the bed and also near the chest,” she said. “They were white, round. I collected and laid them [them] aside. It was either in a bag or a napkin, anything. I put it aside.”


Olga Zwyk
Olga Tsvyk almost passed out at her home in Forest Hills after she was allegedly poisoned.

Prosecutors have accused Viktoria Nasyrova – a 47-year-old Russian-born dominatrix – of poisoning her boyfriend lookalike to steal her identity.

Tsvyk previously testified that Nasyrova came to her house in August 2016 under the guise that she desperately needed eyelash correction – and then fed her a slice of cheesecake allegedly laced with the powerful Russian sedative Phenazepan.

Tsvyk also told the court that she felt sick about 20 minutes after eating the dessert. Eventually she vomited and lost consciousness.

Authorities say Nasyrova stole Tsvyk’s passport and thousands of dollars in cash, then tried to trick her by sprinkling pills all over her lingerie-clad body to make it look like a suicide attempt.


Victoria Nasyrova
Prosecutors have accused Viktoria Nasyrova of poisoning her boyfriend lookalike to steal her identity.
Tamara Beckwith/NY Post

The alleged victim’s sister backed up those claims on Wednesday, telling the court that her sister’s Ukrainian passport and American ID were missing from their usual hiding place upon arrival.

Kozachenko said she flew to New York from Ukraine as soon as she heard her sister was feeling ill and arrived two days later to find her in a depressing condition.

She took Tsvyk to the hospital. But her sister fought on after she was released the next day – Kozachenko said she fed Tsvyk and had to hold her up so she could go to the toilet.

“I fed her and sometimes I could watch her pass out and kind of fall to her side,” Kozachenko said, choking. “So I tried to be with her the whole time so as not to let her fall.”


Victoria Nasyrova
Nasyrova faces up to 25 years in prison if convicted of attempted murder, burglary and other charges in the Queens case.
Gregory P. Mango

Nasyrova – who is also wanted in Russia for allegedly drugging and murdering her neighbor – denied the poisoning in a 2017 prison interview with The Post, simply calling the ordeal a misunderstanding.

“The last time I saw Olga, she was already not feeling well – she said she either ate something or got food poisoning,” Nasyrova said at the time.

Also on Wednesday, the daughter of Russian Nasyrova, who is accused of the 2014 murder, took the stand and told jurors she confronted the dominatrix at a police stabbing after her mother’s gruesome death.

Nadezda Ford said she flew to Russia when her mother Alla Alekseenko – who suddenly fell ill with what appeared to be a cold – stopped responding to her calls and messages.

On October 5, 2014, Ford said she had called her mother “a million times.”

“I texted, I called on Skype, I called direct,” Ford said. “I tried to reach her in every way I could. There was no success.”

Then she called Nasyrova – who her mother once referred to as her “nice neighbor” and who played Ford as a tour guide in the Big Apple in 2013. Nasyrova said she saw Alekseenko a day earlier, Ford testified.


Olga Zwyr
Tsvyk also told the court that she felt sick about 20 minutes after eating the dessert. Eventually she vomited and lost consciousness.

Ford left work and went to Russia, where she eventually found out her mother had died and her home had been robbed.

“Everything – the family gold, bags – everything was missing, [from] the perfume [to] Toothbrush, toothpaste, money, her credit cards, her wallet, her passport, everything,” Ford told the court. “It was absolutely wiped clean.”

Ford and her brother went to the police, who arranged the stabbing. The plan was simple: Plainclothes police officers would sit and watch from an unmarked car as Ford confronted Nasyrova at her home.

Ford walked up to her and hugged Nasyrova – hard and not in a friendly way. She asked a question, something like, “Did you kill my mother?”

“When I asked her that question and squeezed her hard, maybe she started gagging a little bit and she pushed me away and ran upstairs to her apartment,” Ford testified.

The police followed them upstairs, where they arrested, interrogated and released Nasyrova. Ford stayed in Russia for another six months. Returning to America, she repeatedly tried to contact Nasyrova.

Ford said she only got one response: “I told the police everything.”

She broke down and cried after leaving the witness stand.

Prosecutors also plan to call a Queens man as key witness who alleges Nasyrova drugged him after they met on a Russian dating site in 2016. He woke up three days later at Columbia Presbyterian Hospital, the prosecutor said.

Nasyrova faces up to 25 years in prison if convicted of attempted murder, burglary and other charges in the Queens case.

https://nypost.com/2023/02/01/nyc-dominatrix-viktoria-nasyrovas-victim-looked-like-vegetable-after-poison-cheesecake/ NYC dominatrix Viktoria Nasyrova’s victim looked like ‘vegetables’ after poison cheesecake

JACLYN DIAZ

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