Updated at 11:15 a.m. Tuesday to include verdict.

A Dallas woman was found guilty of murder Tuesday for injecting a client with industrial-grade silicone in an amateur cosmetic surgery procedure that ultimately led to her death.

Denise "Wee Wee" Ross was known for giving women bigger butts — which were dubbed the "Wee Wee Booty" — and appointments were made by word-of-mouth.

Denise Ross faces up to life in prison.

Ross, 45, was convicted of murder and practicing medicine without a license.

Her client, 34-year-old Wykesha Reid, was found dead on Feb. 19, 2015, at a salon in the 3800 block of East Side Avenue, near Deep Ellum.

Jurors deliberated for two hours on Monday and two more on Tuesday. The trial now moves to the punishment phase, in which Ross faces up to life in prison.

Prosecutors say Ross and Jimmy Joe "Alicia" Clarke, 34, injected industrial-grade silicone into Reid using syringes. She died of a pulmonary embolism.

The sealant used in the procedure traveled through Reid's veins and clogged her lungs, and she probably struggled to breathe in the moments before her death, testified Dr. Stephen Lenfest, the medical examiner who performed Reid's autopsy.

Reid had probably been dead for four to eight hours before her body was found around 7 a.m. the next day. Injection sites on her buttocks appeared fresh and hadn't healed, Lenfest said.

Jimmy Joe "Alicia" Clarke will be tried in June.

The woman had gotten butt injections at least three times before. Her autopsy revealed that cysts had formed in her backside because of the procedures. The silicone — thicker than water — was still fluid after her death.

And, Lenfest said, it's possible that if Reid had been taken to a hospital, she could have survived.

Crime scene photos show Reid lying on her back on a table — similar to ones found in a doctor's office — with her white pants partially pulled down. A sheet stuck behind her was splattered with blood droplets.

"They didn't even have the decency to pull up her pants," prosecutor Summer Elmazi said during closing arguments.

Elmazi and prosecutor Krystal Biggins said Ross and Clarke worked together to clean up the scene after Reid's death. A woman who does lash extensions testified that Ross told her and her client to leave the salon the night of Feb. 18, 2015. Cellphone records show that Ross was in the area for several hours that night.

But Ross' defense attorney Heath Harris said Clarke acted alone. He told jurors Monday that prosecutors did not offer enough evidence to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Ross injected Reid with silicone or that she was the one using her phone.

Though Clarke and Ross were known to work together, Harris said the evidence points to Clarke as the one there when Reid died. A witness leaving a Deep Ellum bar said he saw Clarke outside the East Side Avenue salon hours before Reid's body was found. And Clarke was the one who called 911.

"I never told you that Miss Ross didn't give butt injections during that time period," Harris said to the jury. "I told you that she did not give butt injections to Miss Reid."

Prosecutor Biggins said that argument didn't make sense.

"It's called a 'Wee Wee Booty,' folks. You don't go to anyone else to get the 'Wee Wee,'" she said.