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GRAPHIC VIDEO/PHOTOS: RUSSIAN 'GENIUS' ENGINEER AT A TOP-SECRET PLANT POISONED OVER 20 COLLEAGUES IN DEADLY REVENGE BECAUSE HE WASN'T PROMOTED INSTEAD

Vladislav Shulga, 37, attempted to poison his boss for passing on him on a promotion he felt entitled to. The "brilliant" Russian design engineer who worked at a top-secret defense plant poisoned dozens of colleagues by using a notorious toxic poison called thallium.  His victims were left with chronic sickness - hair loss, paralysis, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, severe pain... with his intending victims escaping almost unharmed.
Vladislav Shulga
Vladislav Shulga, 37, attempted to poison his boss for passing on him on a promotion he felt entitled to. The "brilliant" Russian design engineer who worked at a top-secret defense plant poisoned dozens of colleagues by using a notorious toxic poison called thallium.
His victims were left with chronic sickness - hair loss, paralysis, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, severe pain... with his intending victims escaping almost unharmed.

Vladislav Shulga, 37, attempted to poison his boss for passing on him on a promotion he felt entitled to. The "brilliant" Russian design engineer who worked at a top-secret defense plant poisoned dozens of colleagues by using a notorious toxic poison called thallium.  His victims were left with chronic sickness - hair loss, paralysis, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, severe pain... with his intending victims escaping almost unharmed.
One of the victims with alopecia
He also attempted to kill a 25-year-old lawyer, Sagil Makhmudov, at his defence plant in Taganrog for reporting him to the police over a hit-and-run offense between the pair but missed his target again.

Thalium was used in Soviet times and known as Saddam Hussein’s "poison of choice."
Reports exposed months of cover ups by the government until desperate and scared employees voiced their concerns asking the government to find their poisoner.

Thalium  was preliminarily suspected in the poisoning of Alexander Litvinenko - a Vladimir Putin enemy, before it was confirmed polonium 210.

Inna Aleinikova of the legal department showed a video of what has become of her hair after months of extensive thalium poisoning by evil colleague:
"This is my hair - all that's now left now. It is as if your body has lost all its skin - you can’t touch it."

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Konstantin Kolesnikov, aircraft designer at the plant and deputy to Shulga’s boss, fell ill and was diagnosed with thalium poisoning. The level of thalium in his blood was 150 times high.
Vladislav Shulga, 37, attempted to poison his boss for passing on him on a promotion he felt entitled to. The "brilliant" Russian design engineer who worked at a top-secret defense plant poisoned dozens of colleagues by using a notorious toxic poison called thallium.  His victims were left with chronic sickness - hair loss, paralysis, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, severe pain... with his intending victims escaping almost unharmed.
Konstantin Kolesnikov
The deputy boss was declared clinically dead at a time due to heart failure from the thalium poisoning that has left dozens other employees with scary grave symptoms. He was reanimated and stabilized by medics.

Kolesnikov is confined to a wheelchair due to paralysis, has lost his eyesight.

Local doctors and officials denied the poisoning even after independent checks proved over 25 people suffered from Shulga’s attacks.
Shulga took an antidote for thallium and continued working like nothing was going on.

He finally confessed after police investigated the poisonings and faces up to five years in jail at his upcoming trial.
Vladislav Shulga, 37, attempted to poison his boss for passing on him on a promotion he felt entitled to. The "brilliant" Russian design engineer who worked at a top-secret defense plant poisoned dozens of colleagues by using a notorious toxic poison called thallium.  His victims were left with chronic sickness - hair loss, paralysis, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, severe pain... with his intending victims escaping almost unharmed.
One of the victims on treatment
He said:
"I saw that my colleagues poisoned two months earlier did not die, and are still alive."
"So I made a smaller dose and added thallium to the water in the legal department."
Some of Shulga's victims are skeptical there's more to the poisoning than the facility is letting out following investigations.

One worker said:
"In our department people who sat near one particular wall are bald."
"Those who sat by the window - all have their hair."
Some suspect Shulga put poison in the air conditoning as well as the water.

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Doctors were confused by the poisoning and initially diagnosed gastritis or rotavirus - or told staff they were healthy.

Thalium has been used as a murder weapon in several countries because it was seen as hard to trace.

According to a local report, woker are "angry that their symptoms have not been properly checked and the authorities want to cover up and deny the thallium poisoning."

Vladislav Shulga, 37, attempted to poison his boss for passing on him on a promotion he felt entitled to. The "brilliant" Russian design engineer who worked at a top-secret defense plant poisoned dozens of colleagues by using a notorious toxic poison called thallium.  His victims were left with chronic sickness - hair loss, paralysis, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, severe pain... with his intending victims escaping almost unharmed.

Vladislav Shulga, 37, attempted to poison his boss for passing on him on a promotion he felt entitled to. The "brilliant" Russian design engineer who worked at a top-secret defense plant poisoned dozens of colleagues by using a notorious toxic poison called thallium.  His victims were left with chronic sickness - hair loss, paralysis, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, severe pain... with his intending victims escaping almost unharmed.



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