‘Pebbelz Da Model’ found guilty of manslaughter in fatal buttocks injection trial

Natasha Stewart, also known as Pebbelz Da Model, looks ahead while her attorneys talk with the prosecutors and the judge over jury instructions during court in Jackson, Miss., Friday, Jan. 31, 2014. She is charged with depraved-heart murder in the death of 37-year-old Karima Gordon, of Atlanta. Stewart allegedly helped arrange the unlicensed buttocks injections that prosecutors say killed Gordon in 2012. The jury begun deliberations Friday. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)
Natasha Stewart, also known as Pebbelz Da Model, looks ahead while her attorneys talk with the prosecutors and the judge over jury instructions during court in Jackson, Miss., Friday, Jan. 31, 2014. She is charged with depraved-heart murder in the death of 37-year-old Karima Gordon, of Atlanta. Stewart allegedly helped arrange the unlicensed buttocks injections that prosecutors say killed Gordon in 2012. The jury begun deliberations Friday. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)
Natasha Stewart, also known as Pebbelz Da Model, looks ahead while her attorneys talk with the prosecutors and the judge over jury instructions during court in Jackson, Miss., Friday, Jan. 31, 2014. She is charged with depraved-heart murder in the death of 37-year-old Karima Gordon, of Atlanta. Stewart allegedly helped arrange the unlicensed buttocks injections that prosecutors say killed Gordon in 2012. The jury begun deliberations Friday. (AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis)

JACKSON, Mississippi (AP) — A woman has been found guilty of manslaughter for the illicit silicone buttocks injections that prosecutors say killed a Georgia woman in 2012.

Natasha Stewart, of suburban Memphis, Tenn., was found guilty Friday in Jackson, Miss., in the death of 37-year-old Karima Gordon of Atlanta.

Stewart had been charged with “depraved-heart” murder, but the jury was told it could consider the lesser charge of manslaughter.

Authorities say Stewart, an adult entertainer also known as Pebbelz Da Model, took $200 for a referral to the alleged injector and falsely represented that the injector was a nurse.

Stewart was found not guilty on charges of wire fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud.

Stewart testified Friday that Gordon was insecure about her body and wanted help fixing previously botched buttocks enhancements. Stewart said she connected Gordon with the woman performing the injections to help her out, not for money, but she said Gordon insisted on paying her.

Stewart also testified that she thought the woman performing the injections at a Jackson house was indeed a registered nurse and had gotten the injections herself more than 20 times over seven years.

“She told me that she was an RN,” Stewart testified.

Prosecutors say Gordon died from silicone in her lungs a few days after getting the shots in March 2012.

Tracey Lynn Garner, the one suspected of administering the injections, is charged with depraved-heart murder in the deaths of Gordon and another woman, Marilyn Hale of Selma, Ala. She has pleaded not guilty. Her trial is scheduled for March.

Emails introduced Friday in Stewart’s case showed that Gordon was a fan of Stewart and was persistent in asking for help to get buttocks injections beginning in 2010.

“I won’t give up my mission to ultimately achieve a tastefully great butt enhancement,” Gordon wrote in one of the messages.

Gordon’s friend, Anglean (AN-juh-lene) Barber, testified Thursday that she and Gordon flew to New York to meet Stewart in February 2012 and that Stewart later referred them to Garner.

Barber said she and Gordon wanted the same kind of buttocks enhancement that Stewart had gotten with hopes of becoming models in the hip-hop industry.

Barber said she and Gordon drove to Garner’s house in Jackson on March 16, 2012, and both planned to get the injections. Barber said she was unsettled by the appearance of Garner, who was a man before having gender reassignment surgery, and decided not to get the injections. Barber said Gordon got sick soon after getting the shots.

A doctor testified Thursday that Gordon died in a Georgia hospital on March 24, 2012, of silicone embolism in her lungs.

During closing arguments Stewarts’s attorney, Kevin Camp, said that the jury should find his client not guilty because “nobody knew that this situation was going to cause any imminent death.” Prosecutors, however, argued that Stewart charged money and lied when she told Gordon that the woman performing the injections was a registered nurse.