The Oxford medical student who was 'too bright' to be jailed after stabbing her Tinder date has found love again with the son a Russian billionaire.

Lavinia Woodward, 24, is now in a relationship with 21-year-old businessman Philip Kagalovsky, whose father counts Roman Abramovich as one of his closest friends, MailOnline can reveal.

The couple have been together since last February and live together in a flat in an exclusive suburb of South West London.

Oxford student Lavinia Woodward who was 'too bright to be jailed' after stabbing her Tinder date with a bread knife has found love again with Philip Kagalovsky (pictured)

Miss Woodward, 24, is living with her new boyfriend in London and they have set up a greetings card company together where they are both listed as company directors

Miss Woodward (pictured arriving at court in September) was handed a suspended 10 month jail term - but her application to take her sentence to the Court of Appeal has been rejected

Miss Woodward, a student at Christ Church at Oxford, was this week denied permission to appeal her 10-month suspended sentence for stabbing her then boyfriend Thomas Fairclough in the leg with a bread knife.

Judge Ian Pringle QC described her as 'an extraordinarily able young lady' and said that sending her to prison would harm her hopes of becoming a surgeon.

Miss Woodward, a budding surgeon, who has suspended her studies Oxford University, has posted a series of images of her and Mr Kagalovsky on social media.

In one photo, uploaded just before Christmas, the couple grin as they pose in front of an ice skating rink.

Another image shows Mr Kagalovsky, who shortens his surname to Kay, with his arm around Miss Woodward in a bar as she clutches a red rose.

He is a former student at the prestigious St Paul's School in Barnes, West London.

Mr Kagalovsky, Miss Woodward's new boyfriend, is the super-rich businessman son of a Russian oil and banking tycoon who is worth £1.2bn and is living in exile in London

Miss Woodward's Facebook profile confirms her relationship with new boyfriend Mr Kagalovsky, which was apparently confirmed in February with this post (pictured)

Miss Woodward was this week denied permission to appeal her 10-month suspended sentence for stabbing her then boyfriend Thomas Fairclough in the leg with a bread knife

His father, Konstantin, is the former vice-president of the oil company Yukos and the former Russian representative to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) who claims to be the owner of Ukranian TV station TVi.

Mr Kagalovsky Senior owns properties in London, New York, Moscow and on the French Riviera.

He is friends with several other Russian oligarchs including Abramovich and the later Boris Berezovsky.

Meanwhile his mother, Natasha Kagalovsky, was the head of the Bank of New York's Eastern European division.

She and her husband were investigated in the late 1990s as part of a money laundering probe looking into claims that billions of dollars were illegally desposited in the bank by Russian mafia bosses. The couple denied any wrongdoing.

The couple met in Washington DC in 1993 when Mr Kagalovsky was Russia's representative to the International Monetary Fund(IMF).

Like most Russian oligarchs, including his friends Abramovich and the late Vladimir Putin enemy Boris Berezovsky, he built his business empire off the back of the mass privatisation of state assets after the fall of the Soviet Union.

He left the IMF in 1994 and five years later became the Vice-President of Russia's one time biggest oil company, Yukos.

That same year he and Natasha were embroiled in a money-laundering investigation by police in three countries, including Britain where they now live in Exile.

The 1999 investigation concerned allegations that Russian mobsters had funnelled up to $15billion through the Bank of New York, of which Mrs Kagalovsky was a top executive.

The couple protested their innocence calling the probe an 'anti-Russian campaign' and no charges were ever brought against them.

However the affair cast a diplomatic shadow, particularly because of claims that senior officials in the administration of then Russian President Boris Yeltsin may have been aware of the money laundering schemes.

Their son and Miss Woodward are understood to run a printing card business based in West London.

Miss Woodward pleaded guilty to unlawful wounding after attacking her former boyfriend, whom she met on dating app Tinder, while he was visiting in December 2016.

She lashed out after he contacted her mother on Skype when he realised she had been drinking.

Mr Kagalovsky's father Konstantin (left) is a Russian billionaire businessman who made his fortune in oil and banking. His wife Natasha Kagalovsky (right), was the head of the Bank of New York's Eastern European division

Konstantin Kagalovsky is pictured in 1991 meeting then Prime Minister John Major at Downing Street when the Russian businessman was named Vice-President of the oil giant Yukos

She threw a laptop at him and stabbed him in the lower leg with the breadknife, injuring two of his fingers in the process.

The offence would normally carry a custodial sentence but she was spared jail because of her academic record, a decision which sparked furious claims of the judicial system being weighted in favour of those with privileged backgrounds.

Miss Woodward declined to comment when approached by MailOnline at the top floor apartment in south Kensington, west London, where she is believed to live with Mr Kagalovsky.