Close X
Sunday, January 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

Woman pleads guilty to assault for giving illegal buttock enhancement injections

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Jan, 2015 04:01 PM

    TORONTO — A Toronto-area woman who injected silicone into the buttocks of nine women — in some cases using syringes attached to a caulking gun — has pleaded guilty to aggravated assault.

    Marilyn Ely Reid, 48, was arrested in November 2012 after a 28-year-old woman fell ill after receiving alleged Botox injections. Police said the woman underwent surgery to have the substance removed.

    Investigators at the time alleged Reid advertised buttock, lip and muscle augmentations and Botox injections on a website called pmmainjection.com.

    Several other victims came forward after her arrest.

    Her lawyer said Monday several of the women have had "serious health issues" ever since the procedure, which his client was not licensed to perform. Reid administered the injections with syringes, Calvin Barry said.

    One of the women — none of whom can be identified due to a publication ban — is still unable to sit down, he said.

    "The way it would work is she'd meet these people... at hotel rooms in the GTA and Toronto and then what she would do is, they'd pay her thousands of dollars and she'd inject them in the buttocks with a silicone-based ingredient," Barry said in a phone interview.

    "It's a little shady when it's happening in a hotel room and cash currency is being passed, it's not like it's at a plastic surgery...location," he said.

    "And so the victims kind of knew what they were getting into, too, but they wanted to enhance their behinds with this Brazilian butt enhancement and anyway, a lot of these women got seriously ill."

    Reid pleaded guilty to eight counts of aggravated assault endangering life — one count was withdrawn — and is due back in court Feb. 27.

    Barry said the Crown is seeking a nine-to-10-year sentence, but he is arguing his client should get sentenced to time served because she is remorseful.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    UPDATES: Dalhousie University students face restorative justice for Facebook posts

    UPDATES: Dalhousie University students face restorative justice for Facebook posts
    HALIFAX — Dalhousie University is proceeding with a restorative justice process to resolve complaints about sexually violent comments posted on a Facebook group page about female dentistry students, the university's president said Wednesday.

    UPDATES: Dalhousie University students face restorative justice for Facebook posts

    Alberta Wildrose opposition shatters in mass exodus, wants premier to succeed

    Alberta Wildrose opposition shatters in mass exodus, wants premier to succeed
    EDMONTON — The leader of Alberta's Official Opposition shattered her caucus Wednesday by leading an en masse floor crossing, saying she no longer had the fire in the belly to oppose Premier Jim Prentice.

    Alberta Wildrose opposition shatters in mass exodus, wants premier to succeed

    TransCanada CEO says industry has lived through worse than latest crude downturn

    TransCanada CEO says industry has lived through worse than latest crude downturn
    CALGARY — The CEO of TransCanada Corp. (TSX:TRP) says he doesn't see the oil industry's appetite for new pipelines faltering even though crude prices have skidded recently to the lowest in more than five-years.

    TransCanada CEO says industry has lived through worse than latest crude downturn

    B.C.'s old Riverview Hospital to offer substance-abuse, mental-health programs

    B.C.'s old Riverview Hospital to offer substance-abuse, mental-health programs
    What was once the home for Metro Vancouver's mentally ill will soon be the location of a rehabilitation and recovery program for those battling mental-health and substance-abuse issues.

    B.C.'s old Riverview Hospital to offer substance-abuse, mental-health programs

    B.C. First Nation still plans to open luxury hospital for tourists, Canadians

    B.C. First Nation still plans to open luxury hospital for tourists, Canadians
    Plans for a for-profit hospital on Westbank First Nation land in West Kelowna, B.C., are still alive despite years of apparent inactivity, says the band's leader.

    B.C. First Nation still plans to open luxury hospital for tourists, Canadians

    Alberta approach to climate change could be a model for North America: Harper

    Alberta approach to climate change could be a model for North America: Harper
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper says the Alberta approach to pricing and controlling greenhouse gas emissions could serve as a model for all of North America.

    Alberta approach to climate change could be a model for North America: Harper