New York woman poisoned lookalike with cheesecake in bid to steal identity

Viktoria Nasyrova (47) is convicted of attempted murder after traces of potent sedative found in container

A New York City woman accused of feeding poisoned cheesecake to her lookalike has been convicted. File photograph: iStock
A New York City woman accused of feeding poisoned cheesecake to her lookalike has been convicted. File photograph: iStock

A New York City woman accused of feeding poisoned cheesecake to her lookalike in a bid to steal the other woman’s identity has been convicted of attempted murder, prosecutors said.

Viktoria Nasyrova (47) was found guilty by a jury of trying to kill Olga Tsvyk (35) with cheesecake laced with a powerful sedative and then stealing her passport and other valuables in August 2016, Queens district attorney Melinda Katz said.

The two women resemble each other, with dark hair and similar skin tones, and Nasyrova hoped to impersonate Ms Tsvyk after killing her, the district attorney said.

“The jury saw through the deception and schemes of the defendant,” Ms Katz said.

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“She laced a slice of cheesecake with a deadly drug so she could steal her unsuspecting victim’s most valuable possession, her identity. Fortunately, her victim survived and the poison led right back to the culprit.”

According to prosecutors, Nasyrova brought the cheesecake to Ms Tsvyk’s home in the Forest Hills section of Queens on August 28th, 2016.

Ms Tsvyk ate the cheesecake, felt sick and lost consciousness, prosecutors said. A friend later found her nearly comatose in bed, and she was taken to a hospital for treatment.

When Ms Tsvyk was discharged from hospital and returned home, she realised that her passport and work authorisation card were missing, along with a gold ring and other valuables, prosecutors said.

Residue from the cheesecake container was tested and found to contain phenazepam, a potent sedative, and Nasyrova was arrested.

Nasyrova was convicted of charges including attempted murder, assault and unlawful imprisonment. She faces up to 25 years in prison when she is sentenced March 21st.

Nasyrova has also been accused of fatally drugging a neighbour in her native Russia in 2014. She denied killing the woman, Alla Alekseenko, in a 2017 interview with CBS News. – AP