S*********g 发帖数: 24893 | 1 【 以下文字转载自 WaterWorld 讨论区 】
发信人: StephenKing (金博士), 信区: WaterWorld
标 题: 28岁的女黑带,长期缺乏性生活
发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Tue Jun 2 00:00:02 2015, 美东)
32岁的俄罗斯人Jasinski冲进位于梅晓夫斯克的一间发廊,试图抢走她们今天的营业额
,结果却被发廊老板Zajac――一位28岁的女黑带高手直接放倒……
这只是Jasinski噩梦的开始而已。他被打晕之后,女老板把他扒光了拖进后面一间小屋
,用电吹风的电线把他捆起来绑在暖气上,然后对他施行了七十多次惨无人道的强奸。
在这3天之中,为了保持性奴的“战斗力”,女老板还给他喂了伟哥。
最后这位劫匪终于被放出来,接受了治疗之后,他去向警方报了案。
Russian Sex Slave Saga: The Ballad of Viktor and Olga
Since 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.
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 the Daily 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. |
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