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As demand for illegal silicone injections grows, so do deaths

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LOS ANGELES (MCT) — Shatarka Nuby just wanted to be pretty.

She longed to fill out her jeans, to look curvier in her bikini, so she sought out a man with a syringe who said he could sell her the body she wanted for $1,000.

In her bedroom in South Florida, witnesses later told police, Nuby handed Oneal Ron Morris a wad of cash and stretched out on her stomach. Morris plunged a syringe filled with clear liquid into Nuby’s hips and buttocks, the onlookers said. Her skin began to rise under the needle.

Nuby underwent treatments for four years and, in time, fell ill. She died in March at age 31.

Morris, 31, now awaits trial on charges of manslaughter. Police say that, using the alias “Duchess,” he gave injections to multiple women in South Florida — pumping their buttocks and other body parts with silicone, mineral oil or Fix-A-Flat tire sealant and sealing the wounds with Super Glue.

Nuby is one of hundreds of people who have turned to a black market version of cosmetic surgery, sometimes with lethal consequences. Her official cause of death: respiratory failure triggered by the massive migration of industrial-grade silicone.

Some see the injections as a quick fix to a plaguing body image problem. Others are strippers or sex workers who seek more feminine bodies, or transgender men who can’t afford hormone therapy.

“Too often, these are acts of desperation,” said Harper Tobin, policy director at the National Center for Transgender Equality.

Since 2002, authorities across the country have investigated more than a dozen deaths related to illegal buttocks injections. Eight people were convicted of practicing medicine without a license or similar offenses. Two others were convicted of negligent homicide or manslaughter.

In a high-profile case out of Philadelphia, Padge Victoria Windslowe, 42 — the self-proclaimed “Black Madam”—was charged in July with third-degree murder.

In September, a Mississippi judge charged Morris Garner, 52, with depraved-heart murder in the death of an Atlanta woman. Investigators say a silicone-like injection caused the blood clots that killed Karima Gordon, 37.

“Until recently, this has been sort of a dark secret,” said Dr. Malcolm Roth, president of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons. “If you have a back-alley procedure done and live to tell the tale, you’ll never be able find the person who did it.”

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