[1] In 1978 she was held as a suspect in the murder of her civil husband, actor Stanislav Zhdanko, but the case was closed.
In 1983, at the request of the relatives of the deceased, the case was reviewed, and the court sentenced her to nine years in prison.
She did not admit her guilt at the trial, she continued to insist on her innocence in an interview given after her release.
[2] In 1988, she was released under an amnesty under the Decree of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR of 18 June 1987, in connection with the seventieth anniversary of Soviet power.
[3][4][5] In 2001, as a result of the trauma, she lost her sight, she lived in a specialized boarding house.