July 22, 2007

Making the San Fernando Valley more vibrant

The eastern half of the San Fernando Valley has had a big influx in just the last few years of people from a big swath of the planet running from, roughly Moscow to Yemen. Lots of them are good eggs, but a few have definitely made the place more, uh, colorful. For example, there was this gang who kidnapped and murdered five fellow ex-Soviet immigrants from a luxurious house in the hills of Encino.

And now, from the LA Times:

Yana Kovalevsky made a colorful entrance. Not long out of the hospital, she hobbled into her neighborhood Starbucks for an interview on a purple-and-pink-striped cane. A blond-and-brown-streaked wig roosted on her head.

Under the wig, her scalp was a patchy landscape. A traumatic shedding had left the locks that once cascaded to her elbows struggling to regrow.

She needed the cane because a nerve-pinging disorder that somehow combined pain and numbness had turned her legs to rubber.

Last February, during a visit to their native Russia, Kovalevsky, a 27-year-old North Hollywood social worker, and her physician mother became critically ill from the effects of thallium. Their ordeal made worldwide headlines because thallium is a rare poison usually associated with political assassins and murderous inheritance seekers, not with the likes of Yana and Dr. Marina Kovalevsky.

It remains unknown how they came to ingest the tiny but potentially lethal amounts of the heavy metal. Among the other unanswered questions is who targeted them and why — if the poisoning was intentional, as mother, daughter and their doctors now believe. ...

A decade and a half before they were poisoned, the Kovalevskys had been an unheralded part of another international story — the emigration of Soviet Jews. They had followed Marina's brother Dr. Leon Peck, a fellow physician, to the United States. Peck had been a refusenik for 10 years before he received a visa to leave Russia in 1988. The Kovalevskys got out in 1991, settling in Los Angeles and then moving to Louisiana, where Marina, 50, completed a medical residency. They returned to California, where Marina established a family practice out of a West Hollywood storefront.

She is now back at work and has declined to be interviewed, pleading for privacy. Yana said her mother's reticence hardened after FBI agents investigating the poisoning queried her about the Russian American medical community, which has been a focus of insurance fraud inquiries.


My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer

7 comments:

  1. For A Few Shekels More

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  2. Maybe someone was trying to poison someone else and hit these two by mistake?

    Is there something about Russians and heavy metals?

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  3. What's the standard scientific unit of vibrancy? The vibrio?

    "Cholera is an acute, diarrheal illness caused by infection of the intestine with the bacterium Vibrio cholerae."

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  4. the Russian American medical community, which has been a focus of insurance fraud inquiries

    Funny how you have to read ten or fifteen paragraphs into these stories to get to the money quote.

    Plus ça change...

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  5. It remains unknown how they came to ingest the tiny but potentially lethal amounts of the heavy metal.

    Maybe they were smuggling it?

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  6. This is the sort of thing I used to read about in the newspapers when I lived in NY. It sounds like the SFV is becoming more like Brooklyn and Queens ... which is not an entirely bad thing. The late-20th-century European and Asian immigrants to BQ learned English - or already knew it, like the Indian subcontinentals - started businesses, went to school, and generally prospered in the old-fashioned immigrant way. Of course, they also imported their home-country crime networks, but that's hardly the first time such a thing has happened in the US.

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  7. How come I never run across these deadly smart yet afflicted ruskies? I'm bored, bored, bored with this pitiful town!

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