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Robber broke into salon, beaten by black-belt owner, kept as sex slave (1 Viewer)

jdoggydogg

Footballguy
Yes, this salon owner beat up a robber. Yes, she used him as a sex slave for three days. Yes, this is the greatest news story ever.

Robber who broke into hair salon is beaten by its black-belt owner and kept as a sex slave for three days... fed only Viagra

But the tables were turned dramatically when he found himself overcome by owner Olga Zajac, 28, who happened to be a black belt in karate. She allegedly floored the would-be robber with a single kick. Then, in a scene reminiscent of Quentin Tarantino's Pulp Fiction, police say Zajac dragged the semi-conscious Jasinski to a back room of the salon and tied him up with a hair dryer cable. She allegedly stripped him naked and, for the next three days, used him as a sex slave to 'teach him a lesson' - force feeding him Viagra to keep the lesson going.

The would-be robber was eventually released, with Zajak saying he had learned his lesson. Jasinski went straight to the police and told them of his back-room ordeal, saying that he had been held hostage, handcuffed naked to a radiator, and fed nothing but Viagra. Both have now been arrested. When police arrived to question Zahjac, she said: 'What a *******. Yes, we had sex a couple of times. But I bought him new jeans, gave him food and even gave him 1,000 roubles when he left."
 
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that blurry pic doesn't count. Though it appears to have been a 'supermarket tabloid hoax' anyway



Russian Sex Slave Media Mystery

Jul. 14 2011 - 6:42 pm | 1 views | 0 recommendations | 0 commentsYou just can’t keep a good sex slave down.http://blogs-images.forbes.com/kiriblakeley/files/2011/07/pari-199x300.jpghttp://blogs-images.forbes.com/kiriblakeley/files/2011/07/pari.jpg' alt='a>'>

As I wrote on Tuesday in my blog“Same Old Sex Slave, Brand New Gawker Story,” Gawker and The Daily Mail in the UK both published a sensationalistic story about a man who broke into a hair salon in the small Russian town of Meshchovsk and was quickly overpowered by the 28-year-old black belt female owner, who then dragged him to a back room and tied him to a radiator with a hair dryer cord. Must have been a long cord because he was kept there for three days, force fed Viagra (glad she had it on hand!) and repeatedly raped.

Today, the story is spreading quicker than Viagra through the bloodstream. Many more media outlets, including Slate and variousRussian papers, have repeated the story.

All of them are taking their information directly from the July 12 Daily Mail story. The problem is that this story—and it’s quite a whopper—is over two years old. It first appeared in April 2009 in The Moscow Times, which even questions if it’s real, noting that Life.ru, which originally posted the police complaint, has been “setting the bar high for sensationalist scoops.” The Moscow Times then links to the complaint on Life.ru, but that link is now dead. Life.ru is now Lifenews.ru, and since it’s in Russian, I had my Russian-speaking friend do a search for the complaint, which was supposedly on the site. No dice. Something that looks like a police complaint can be found on a site called News.ru, which got its information from Life.ru, but it is too blurry to read. There’s also a picture of a man and a woman, with their faces blurred. Is this the rapist and her sex slave? Who can tell?

Indeed, many commenters on the various articles about this story have mentioned that the story was previously proven to be a fake, but I couldn’t find anything about that on Snopes.com.

One bit of new information the Daily Mail published that was not in the original April 2009 Moscow Times story nor an April 2009 Russian story that re-reported the Life.ru story, was the last names of the hair salon rapist and her sex slave. They went from Olga and Viktor in the April 2009 Moscow Times story to Olga Zajac and Viktor Jasinki in the July 12, 2011 Daily Mail story. Presumably their last names were never on the original Life.ru complaint, or The Moscow Times would have published them.

So the question is, where did the Daily Mail UK get the last names? And why did they publish a two-and-a-half-year-old story as if it happened two days ago?

I’ve put in a call to the Daily Mail UK and await their reply. Hopefully they can clear up the Russian sex slave mystery once and for all.

Heck, maybe those two kids are happily married now.

Kiri Blakeley writes about entertainment, media, and women. Follow her on Twitter.

 
Update with non pixelatd BS pics

I guess no one ever accused you of reading a thread before commenting...
Jul. 14 2011 - 6:42 pm | 11,923 views | 0 recommendations | 6 comments

Russian Sex Slave Media Mystery

You just can’t keep a good sex slave down.http://blogs-images.forbes.com/kiriblakeley/files/2011/07/pari-199x300.jpghttp://blogs-images.forbes.com/kiriblakeley/files/2011/07/pari.jpg' alt='a>'>

As I wrote on Tuesday in my blog“Same Old Sex Slave, Brand New Gawker Story,” Gawker and The Daily Mail in the UK both published a sensationalistic story about a man who broke into a hair salon in the small Russian town of Meshchovsk and was quickly overpowered by the 28-year-old black belt female owner, who then dragged him to a back room and tied him to a radiator with a hair dryer cord. Must have been a long cord because he was kept there for three days, force fed Viagra (glad she had it on hand!) and repeatedly raped.

Today, the story is spreading quicker than Viagra through the bloodstream. Many more media outlets, including Slate and variousRussian papers, have repeated the story. PerezHilton gets so upset that he editorializes about how “disgusting” it is. Commenters on many sites are heatedly debating over whether or not a woman can rape a man. And, in a game of sex slave telephone, each outlet is adding their own little twist to the story. The Irish Independent, for example, claims that the salon owner kicked the robber in the privates.

All these media outlets are taking their information directly from the July 12 Daily Mail story. The problem is that this story—and it’s quite a whopper—is over two years old. It first appeared in April 2009 in The Moscow Times, which even questions if it’s real, noting that Life.ru, which originally posted the police complaint, has been “setting the bar high for sensationalist scoops.” The Moscow Times then links to the complaint on Life.ru, but that link is now dead. Life.ru is now Lifenews.ru, and since it’s in Russian, I had my Russian-speaking friend do a search for the complaint, which was supposedly on the site. No dice.

Something that looks like a police complaint (or a scribbled-on napkin, depending) can be found on a site called News.ru, which got its information from Life.ru, but it is too blurry to read. There’s also a picture of a man and a woman, with their faces blurred. Is this the rapist and her sex slave? Who can tell?

Indeed, many commenters on the various articles about this story have mentioned that the story was previously proven to be a fake, but I couldn’t find anything about that on Snopes.com.

One bit of new information the Daily Mail published that was not in the original April 2009 Moscow Times story nor the April 2009 News.ru story that summarized the Life.ru story, was the last names of the hair salon rapist and her sex slave. They went from just Olga and Viktor in theMoscow Times story (and in all of the outlets that picked it up) to Olga Zajac and Viktor Jasinki in the July 12, 2011 Daily Mail story.

Presumably their last names were never on the original Life.ru story, orThe Moscow Times would have published them. But now everyone picking up the Daily Mail story is using those last names, which didn’t exist two days ago—at least, not in the general media. Meanwhile, the two are becoming famous: “Olga Zajac: World’s Greatest Salon Owner” now has her own Facebook page with almost 2000 likes.

So the question is, where did the Daily Mail UK get the last names? And why did they publish a two-and-a-half-year-old story as if it happened two days ago?

I’ve spoken to two different people in the news room of the Daily Mail, and emailed these questions twice. I’m still awaiting a response. Hopefully they can clear up the Russian sex slave mystery once and for all.

Heck, maybe those two kids are happily married now.

See my latest blog on this topic: Russian Sex Slave Saga: The Ballad of Viktor and Olga.

Kiri Blakeley writes about entertainment, media, and women. Follow her on Twitter.
Russian Sex Slave Saga: The Ballad of Viktor and OlgaJul. 15 2011 - 2:39 pm | 3,395 views | 0 recommendations | 12 commentsSince Tuesday, I have blogged about a story making the rounds on the Internet, and even in some legit media outlets, about a man who broke into a hair salon in Meshchovsk, Russia, was overpowered by the female salon owner, who was a karate black belt, and subsequently tied to a radiator with a dryer cord, force-fed Viagra, and made her sex slave for three days.http://blogs-images.forbes.com/kiriblakeley/files/2011/07/pari-199x300.jpghttp://blogs-images.forbes.com/kiriblakeley/files/2011/07/pari.jpg' alt='a>'>The Daily Mail in the UK was the first to report this story, on July 12, 2011. Gawker subsequently picked it up, and it has spread since then to outlets like Slate and The Irish Independent. Commenters on various message boards have reported hearing the story on local TV and radio stations.On Tuesday, I pointed out that this story first surfaced way back in April 2009. It was posted on the Russian website Life.ru, and then picked up by The Moscow Times. It made the blog rounds back then. When theDaily Mail reposted the same story on Tuesday, it gained new life.I questioned whether this story was even real because the original April 2009 Moscow Times story questioned it, noting that Life.ru is "sensationalistic." A poster on Reddit was able to dig up the original Life.ru story, which is here (wait for it to load and then scroll down, but it won't do you much good unless you read Russian or can understand your Google translator). The pictures of the man and woman, identified in the story as Viktor J. and Olga, with their faces blurred, are also making the Internet rounds. The warring police complaints (hers about him being a burglar; his about her being a rapist) were supposedly on Life.ru originally, but The Moscow Times links to them no longer work, and I don't see them in the Life.ru story dug up on Archive.org.What's different about the story this time around is that Viktor and Olga suddenly have last names. They are now Viktor Jasinski and Olga Zajac, according to the July 12 Daily Mail story. Yet I couldn't find their last names in any of the April 2009 articles.The Daily Mail has not responded to three emails and two phone calls asking where it found the last names. Nor has the paper explained why they published a story on Tuesday about an incident that happened two-and-a-half years ago. If it does, I will update this post.Maybe the story is true. Certainly, a lot of people want it to be. It seems to speak to a certain "female empowerment" and Olga now has her own fan page on Facebook with almost 2000 likes. Women are exulting on her wall with such posts as: "Olga, you are my hero!" and "Power!!" Maybe whether the story is true or not isn't even the point. Maybe she's become a "real life" Lisbeth Salander.But in these days of viral information and newspaper scandals, let this be a lesson to us all: If you're going to break into a hair salon, make sure the owner isn't a Viagra-hoarding black belt.Kiri Blakeley writes about entertainment, women, and media. Follow her on Twitter.

 
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