Russian Woman, Alexandra, Who Forgave Her Boyfriend For Viciously Biting Her Pays The Ultimate Price
Be careful what you tolerate or even forgive, because you may be teaching people how to treat you. When it comes to relationships and domestic violence, women often than not are at the receiving end. In loving, and in hating; like everything else in life, moderation is key and every woman or indeed individual should learn when to stop watering a dead flower. This golden rule of life is what 20-year-old Russian girl Alexandra Shaposhnikova, did not apply when she begged a judge not to jail her boyfriend for biting off her nose a year before.
Alexandra’s boyfriend, Oleg Myshadaev, 20, had previously been spared jail after Alexandra Shaposhnikova, also 20, begged a judge not to send him to prison for biting off her nose.
However, one year on he went into a vodka-fuelled rage and Alexandra was found by police with hammer and knife wounds in the flat the couple shared in Saransk city, Russia.
Local sources said that she died as a result of head injuries and her body was left in the bathroom for two days. A hammer, knife and broken cue was found at the crime scene.
Five empty vodka bottles were discovered in the flat, where a female friend had been asleep while the attack happened, say reports.
A court sitting heard that Oleg suffered from ‘uncontrollable anger and jealousy’. Prosecutors demanded a lengthy jail sentence for Myshadaev after he assaulted Alexandra, biting off her nose a year before he killed her in a drunken rage, but she told the judge:
‘I have no claims against Oleg.
I am asking the court to please not lock him up.’
He was found guilty and given a suspended jail sentence of 18 months. This meant he walked free from court. After the incident, Alexandra continued to live with Myshadaev – who she had met at music college where they shared a desk.
Had the sentence not been suspended he would have been in jail when he killed her.
A court ordered his detention for two months as a murder case was launched by the Russian Investigative Committee, if convicted he faces up to 15 years in jail.
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