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A former Russian dominatrix was sentenced to 21 years in prison after her twisted attempt to poison her doppelgänger with laced cheesecake and steal her identity.
Viktoria Nasyrova, 45, shouted 'F*** you' toward the Queens Supreme Court judge who sentenced her to more than two decades in prison on Wednesday.
Nasyrova was found guilty of attempted murder, attempted assault and unlawful imprisonment in February after her bizarre August 2016 scheme of poisoning eyelash specialist Olga Tsvyk with phenazepam-infused dessert and staging her near death as a suicide.
Tsvyk, who survived the attack in her Queen's home, spoke in court before the sentencing about her betrayed trust in Nasyrova. In a heartbreaking testimony, Tsvyk shared to the jurors that it was 'easy for her to kill.'
The victim was allegedly one of the many on Nasyrova's list dating back to 2014 when she fled Russia after the murder of her neighbor and accusations of drugging and robbing men she found on dating websites.
Viktoria Nasyrova, 45, was sentenced to 21 years in prison in a Queens, New York courtroom on Wednesday for her twisted attempt to poison and kill her friend. Pictured: Viktoria Nasyrova
The former Russian dominatrix was also tied to a string of crimes dating to 2014. Pictured: Nasyrova
Nasyrova stood casually dressed in the courtroom with pants, a t-shirt, a side-braid and a face mask as the judge read her sentence. She received four years off her maximum 25 year sentence.
Behind her was Tsvyk wearing a stylish red leather bomber jacket and black jeans. Tsvyk spoke during the hearing about her second chance at life.
'God gave me life when Viktoria Nasyrova tried to end my life,' Tsvyk said. 'For her, it was an easy thing to try and take the life of another person.
'It was easy thing to gain the trust of another person and then take everything from that person... it was easy for her to steal. It was easy for her to kill.'
Tsyvk, an eyelash stylist, met Nasyrova six months before she was poisoned in 2016, the victim shared in court in February.
The two became friends and Tsyvk shared with the former dominatrix at the time how she was getting her employment authorization card.
On the day she was attacked in 2016, Nasyrova had arrived at her home in Forest Hills, Queens, in desperate need of her services. In exchange, Nasyrova insisted she would bring the stylist cheesecake she purchased at a local bakery.
After arriving at her home, Nasyrova ate two slices of cheesecake offering a third slice, that prosecutors say had been laced with Russian tranquilizer Phenazepan, according to Tsvyk.
Tsvyk told the court that she started to feel sick about 20 minutes after eating the cake and began to vomit as she laid down in her bed.
Prosecutors claimed that Nasyrova then stole Tsvyk's passport, cash, US employment authorization card and other belongings and tried to make the incident appear to look like a suicide by scattering pills around the victim's body.
Tsvk was found by her sister, Iryna Kozachenko, who called the police.
The victim told the judge and jurors on Wednesday that she lived in fear for months after she survived the attack, especially since it took months to capture the former dominatrix.
Nasyrova committed the crime in August 2016 when she tricked Olga Tsvyk (left) into eating cheesecake laced with phenazepam. Tsvyk survived the attack
Tsyvk, an eyelash stylist, met Nasyrova six months before she was poisoned in 2016, the victim shared in court in February.
On the day she was attacked in August 2016, Nasyrova had arrived at her home in Forest Hills, Queens, in desperate need of her services. In exchange, Nasyrova insisted she would bring the stylist cheesecake she purchased at a local bakery. Nasyrova laced the Cheesecake she gave to Tsyvk
Prosecutors claimed that Nasyrova then stole Tsvyk's passport, cash, US employment authorization card and other belongings and tried to make the incident appear to look like a suicide by scattering pills around the victim's body. Pictured: Nasyrova walking into the court room
Tsvyk spoke during the Wednesday hearing about her second chance at life. She is seen above with her sister
Nasyrova said 'f*** you' to the Queens Supreme Court judge after he sentenced her
Nasyrova, who was infatuated by expensive fur coats and diamonds, was finally captured in 2017 after she was tracked down by the daughter of the woman she is accused of killing in Russia.
The former dominatrix fled to the US in 2014 following the brutal slaying of her neighbor Alla Alekseenko, 54.
Alekseenko remains were found burned and buried two miles from her home in Krasnodar, in southern Russia.
DailyMail.com exclusively revealed images of the victim's body in the front seat of Nasyrova's car by traffic cameras in 2017, investigators at the time saying, money was the motive for the heartless homicide.
It's been reported she was allegedly able to escape Russia by having sex with a local police officer. Interpol then issued a red notice for her arrest for murder.
Alla Alekseenko, 54's, body was found months later, badly burned and reduced to a skull and a few bones identifiable only through dental records
Stories of running from the law after the murder of a woman in Russia in 2014 among accusations of targeting men on dating websites, drugging and robbing them, also emerged about Nasyrova
Nasyrova fled to America and began a new life as masseuse with 'experience in upscale spas and beauty salons,' according to an ad for 'quality massage at home' she posted shortly after arriving in the Big Apple.
But, her sordid past was to follow her, when Alekseenko's horrified daughter learned that the wanted Russian beauty was now living just miles away from her in Brooklyn.
Alekseenko's daughter then paid a private detective in New York to look into Nasyrova and bring her to justice. The detective was able to hunt Nasyrova down and arrest her.
At the time, Nasyrova was also wanted by NYPD on suspicion of drugging and robbing at least three men she met via a New York dating website.
Victim Ruben Borukhov, 54, testified in court to being drugged by the con artist while on a date with her. He woke up to find charges up to $2,600 on his credit card and his watch missing.
NYPD Chief of Detectives Bob Boyce said: 'She embarked on a life of crime here.'