Metro

Russian immigrant claims ex-boyfriend posted photos of her online, tried to get her visa revoked

A young Russian immigrant says her dentist ex-boyfriend posted steamy photos of her on a prostitution website and then sicced US Immigration officers on her in a bid to get her visa revoked, according to a $16 million suit she filed in Brooklyn against the ex and the website.

Ruzilya Khusnutdinova, 24, came to New York on a student visa in 2009 and began dating Brooklyn dentist Vladimir Dranovsky, 41, a few months later, the Brooklyn Supreme Court suit states.

Dranovsky bought his young lover a cell phone and she soon moved into his Brighton Beach apartment, according to the filing.

He allegedly snapped several semi-nude photos of Khusnutdinova on a hotel bed during a 2010 trip to Lake George with her camera, the suit states.

Khusnutdinova dumped her beau in 2011 after he allegedly cheated on her with other women and threw a belt at her, she claims in the suit. She also filed for an order of protection.

About a year after their breakup Immigration and Custom Enforcement officers visited Khusnutdinova and questioned whether she was engaged in prostitution in New York. The officers showed Khusnutdinova her profile on a web site called escortsexguide.com, which featured three scandalous photos of her taken in Lake George.

“I have a medium frame, and very touchy breasts,” part of the posted profile reads. “I like games of seduction and am very playful.”

When the officers showed Khusnutdinova the complaint that had been filed against her, she said she recognized the handwriting and identified it as allegedly being Dranovsky’s.

Alerted to the profile on the prostitution website, Khusnutdinova filed for another order of protection against Dranovsky. She also asked the website and its owner, Paul J. Brown, to take down the profile, but it remains online.

The suit, filed by attorney Alena Shautsova, demands $8 million for emotional distress, $4 million for defamation, and another $4 million for violation of New York Civil Law.

Khusnutdinova — who majored in biochemistry at Kazen Chemical University in Russia — now studies English at American Language Community Center in Manhattan.

jsaul@nypost.com