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A con woman who tried murdering her lookalike with a poisoned piece of cheesecake almost got away with it. And if not for the sleuthing skills of the private investigator who tracked her down, she might have gotten away with something much <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.pl>stanley cup</a>  worse, too. 48 Hours  correspondent Peter Van Sant reports on the details in an encore of  The Case of the Poison Cheesecake, now streaming on Paramount+.In August 2016 <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.uk>stanley cup</a> , Olga Tsvyk, a beauty stylist in Queens, New York, became gravely ill and lost consciousness after her client, Viktoria Nasyrova, came to her home and gave her a piece of poisoned cheesecake.                The cheesecake container retrieved from Olga Tsvyk s garbage still has crumbs left inside.                                                       CBS News                                        At the hospital, Tsvyk says she nearly died. Days later  <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.fr>stanley cup</a> she came to, and when she got home saw that some of her belongings including purses, money and jewelry were gone. She told police Nasyrova was to blame. Police hunted for Nasyrova but couldn t find her. They had no idea they weren t the only ones looking.                                        So was Herman Weisberg. The NYPD detective-turned-private investigator was trying to find Nasyrova for a different case and had started researching her online.On a quiet, sleepless night in early 2017, he opened his laptop and visited Nasyrova s Facebook profile. He studied it and found something startling.         In one of the photos, N Ufcz Only 40% of Harvard undergrads will return to campus this fall
FRANKFORT, Ky. -- The 25 million people who live among the Appalachian mountains have struggled to keep up with health gains of the rest of the nation, falling behind in most major public health indicators, according to a study released Thursday.The report shows the 13-state region lags the rest of the country in 33 out of 41 population health indicators, including seven of the leading 10 causes of death in the United States. Deaths by poisoning, which include drug overdoses, were 37 percent higher than the rest of the country mdash; a testament to the opioid addiction crisis that has gripped the area for years.Central Appalachia, which is mostly in the eastern portion Kentucky, was the worst of the worst. It led all other regions of Appalachia in deaths  <a href=https://www.stanley-cup.ca>stanley cup</a> from heart disease, cancer, lung disease, injuries and diabetes. In the category of  years of potential life lost,  a measure of premature deaths, central Appalachia lost more than 11,200 years from 2011 to 2013. No other Appalachian region was above 9,200.                                         I think it s a wakeup call,  said Ben Chandler, president and CEO of the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky, which issued the study along with the Appalachian Regional Commission and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.  We are dealing with real challenges in Appalachian Kentucky and the health of the enti <a href=https://www.adidas-yeezys.fr>yeezy</a> re state, both economically and physically. A spokeswoman for Republican Gov. <a href=https://www.yeezy.com.mx>yeezy</a>  Matt Bevin of Kentucky said the report highlights why
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