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‘Black Madam’ held on murder charges over buttock-enhancing injections

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Windslowe’s attorney, Christopher Mannix, disputed some of Hellman’s findings, saying the silicone in Aderotimi’s lungs was never compared with the silicone found at the injection site. Given that Aderotimi had received injections on at least two occasions, he said, the link to Windslowe was circumstantial.

“After more than 18 months, no test has been done on the silicone that was found in the lungs,” he said after the hearing. “There’s no way to connect that to the alleged injection Feb. 7.”

Gyamfi, who works in a jewelry store, testified that she and Aderotimi worked as dancers and occasional models in London and that they began researching plastic surgery in March 2010. They consulted two doctors in London, but decided against one after learning that the injections would be absorbed into the body and would have to be replaced. They found a website featuring before-and-after pictures of enhancement surgeries, and eventually contacted a woman who said she had received successful buttock injections.

That woman, identified by Gyamfi as “Sasha,” offered to arrange for the two women to get injections. She told them that the woman who did hers was a nurse-practitioner and that Sasha would arrange everything in exchange for a referral fee of $300 per person.

Kirn said authorities had not decided whether to charge Sasha criminally.

In November 2010, Gyamfi and Aderotimi flew to Philadelphia and checked into the Hampton Inn, where they were met by Sasha and Windslowe, whom they knew as “Lillian.” Sasha encouraged them to touch her buttocks so they could see how the injections felt after completion, and she said that once the silicone was injected, it stayed in one place. The worst thing that could happen, Sasha and Windslowe told them, was that the silicone might leak out.

“After these discussions, how did you feel about whether you should do this or not?” Assistant District Attorney Carlos Vega asked.

“Confident,” Gyamfi said.

Gyamfi and Aderotimi were so pleased with the results they returned to Philadelphia in February, she said. Each paid about $2,000 for her first round of injections, then $1,800 for the second. Each time, they were given the choice of a “bubble butt” or “teardrop” shape, and Windslowe used markers to draw on their skin before telling them to lie down. Windslowe filled needles with a clear liquid, Gyamfi said, then sealed the injection wounds with Crazy Glue and cotton balls. In February, Gyamfi said, Windslowe brought a woman with her, explaining that Windslowe was “training her.”

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