Updated at 4:33 p.m. Friday to reflect guilty verdict.

An Uber driver has been found guilty of sexually assaulting a 27-year-old customer in her Dallas home after taking her there following a night drinking in Oak Lawn.

Talal Ali Chammout, 59, was convicted Friday of attacking the woman he picked up July 25, 2015, in Oak Lawn and drove to her west Oak Cliff home.

Talal Ali Chammout

Defense attorneys argued that Chammout had consensual sex with the woman, but prosecutors said the woman was too drunk to consent.

The seven male jurors and five female jurors began deliberating Thursday and discussed the case for more than nine hours before reaching a verdict.

Chammout faced two counts of felony sexual assault — one for intercourse and one for another sex act.

Jurors convicted Chammout of the sex act but not on the intercourse charge.

The jury requested to again watch parts of a 1 1/2-hour interview between Chammout and investigators during deliberations. At one point in the interview, Chammout describes a moment when the woman told him, "No."

Chammout, who had been free on bond, was taken into custody after the verdict Friday. State District Judge Gracie Lewis will determine his sentence in a hearing that continues Monday.

The woman, who was 27 at the time, testified that Chammout followed her inside her home and raped her. She remembered telling him to leave after he followed her inside but her memory after that is hazy, she said.

She had been drinking with friends that day, and a friend helped her order an Uber ride that picked her up before 8 p.m., she testified.

Prosecutors Trey Stock and Amy Derrick said the woman could not have consented to sex because she was too intoxicated. They said Chammout abused his position of trust as a driver-for-hire to rape the woman.

Initially, the woman told police that Chammout hit her on the back of the head. She had a large bump on her head, but she testified that she doesn't remember everything that happened that night. Investigators said it's possible she sustained the bump in a fall.

But, she said, she does remember coming to and telling Chammout, "No."

In a recorded interview with police, Chammout also described a moment in which the woman told him, "No."

He said it was after they had sex and when he tried to help her into bed. He pointed to his inner thighs and his crotch to indicate where he kissed her after putting her in bed.

He said he asked if she wanted more, and she told him she didn't.

Stock said Chammout's statements corroborate the woman's story that she was drunk and wasn't able to consent. At one point during the police interview, Chammout said he was going to check on the woman because he was "scared."

"He's scared because she's intoxicated," Stock argued. "She wasn't conscious. He tells you that."

Stock argued that the jury's verdict will send a message to trusted people, like Uber drivers, that "if you violate that trust, if you take advantage of someone, there are consequences."

Defense attorney Heather Barbieri argued that Chammout was being targeted because of his age and appearance and because he is from Lebanon.

"If it were a young, blue-eyed college kid ... we wouldn't be here. That case would never have been filed," she said.

Barbieri said the woman had "beer goggles" the night of the incident and woke up with "buyer's remorse."

She referred to her client as the opposite of Prince Charming: "Prince Charmless."

"Prosecution wants you to go, 'Ew, gross, he's too disgusting. She would never consent to that,'" she argued.

Chammout did not testify during the nearly three-day trial, nor did the defense call any witnesses.

During the police interview, Chammout said the woman came on to him. When he picked her up from an Uptown bar, she sat in the front seat. He said she talked to him the whole way home.

At one point, after he thought they had agreed to spend time together, he turned off the fare in the Uber app. He said she dropped her keys while trying to open her door and he picked them up and unlocked the door for her.

NOW: Talal Chammout, the #Uber driver accused of sexually assaulting a customer in 2015, after dropping her off at her #Dallas apartment, goes to on trial today. @FOX4 is in the courtroom. pic.twitter.com/1Ek3YycD8Q — Alex Boyér (@AlexBoyerFox4) May 15, 2018

In the recorded interview, he graphically described the sexual encounter at the woman's house.

"We kissed and made love," he said.

After intercourse, Chammout said, the woman went downstairs. He found her on the floor by her bed, and asked, "You OK? You want more?"

Chammout looked shocked when investigators told him that the woman said she was raped.

"I don't know what I did wrong," he told police. "I just thought she was a single girl wanting to go out on a date."

Barbieri said Chammout believed the woman liked him. But prosecutors argued that's not what consent is.

"Being nice to someone or maybe even flirting with someone does not mean consent," Derrick argued.