“Unlocking Day 9: A Mysterious Gift Reveals Secrets That Could Change Everything”
What happens when a Hollywood woman decides to make the “Uber, but for drugs” business model her ticket to success? Well, if you’re thinking that it might end with glitzy parties and glamorous lifestyles, think again! Mirela Todorova’s story is a sobering reminder of how the allure of quick cash can lead to life-altering consequences. After being convicted for running a drug delivery service that led to multiple overdoses, her apartment turned out to be more of a chaotic drug hub than a chic, celebrity hideaway. Join me as we dive into the details of her trial that highlight the thin line between ambition and recklessness—perfect fodder for a screenplay if there ever was one! Curious how it all unfolded? LEARN MORE.

This is the 15th year in a row I’ve run this series in April.
Today’s story idea: “Hollywood woman convicted of running delivery service dubbed ‘Uber, but for drugs.’”
A Hollywood woman was convicted Tuesday of running a lucrative drug delivery business out of her apartment, with a jury finding her responsible for supplying fentanyl that caused multiple overdoses in 2020 and 2021.
Mirela Todorova, 36, stood trial beginning last month, accused of leading an operation prosecutors described as “Uber, but for drugs.” She was convicted on nine counts, including three charges of drug distribution that caused “serious bodily injury” in three nonfatal overdoses.
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DEA agents who searched her apartment said they found several stockpiles of plastic bowls containing colorful pills and powders — beside them, packing materials and kitchen scales with chalky residue. Ziploc bags of cash, labeled by amount, were tucked into bedside drawers and strewn about the floor.
Agents ultimately seized from the property about 944 grams of cocaine, 96 grams of MDMA, 90 grams of ketamine, mushrooms and various pills and capsules, including a discolored oxycodone pill that tested positive for fentanyl. They also confiscated nearly $9,000 in cash and Todorova’s iPhone, which prosecutors said stored “a daily journal of a drug owner operating a drug business.”
Evidence from Todorova’s iMessage and WhatsApp accounts showed she sent regularly updated drug menus to her drivers and clients, instructed Sei how to cook drugs in her apartment and demanded efficiency from other delivery drivers to maximize her profits, estimated at around $790,000.
This story brings to mind Pineapple Express.
And The Wolf of Wall Street.
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