A Texas A&M University-Commerce student is going viral on Twitter — because of her makeup look in a recent police booking photograph.

As BuzzFeed As/Is reported, 20-year-old Marshala Perkins was arrested for marijuana possession on February 6th. According to BuzzFeed, the student and self-taught makeup artist had just finished filming a beauty tutorial on Facebook Live when her friends invited her to go out with them. As they were leaving the dorm, two white Hunt County police officers approached her car.

"[One officer] asked me for my handicap sticker because I was in a handicap spot," Marshala told BuzzFeed, explaining that she often drives her mother, who is a cancer patient. "I gave it to him and he brought it back, said everything was clear." But then, instead of leaving, one of the officers commented that the car smelled of weed — which Marshala allegedly denied — and proceeded to search the car. The officers allegedly found two grams of weed, according to BuzzFeed, and arrested her on the spot. (Carrying two ounces or less of marijuana is a misdemeanor in Texas; laws vary by state.)

"And so I went to jail for it with my beat face,” Marshala told BuzzFeed. "At first I was embarrassed because [getting arrested] is not really something that you want to be broadcasted," Marshala told BuzzFeed of the experience. "But then when I saw all the support for me with my face beat — because makeup is something that I really wanted to do — I was like OK!' I wasn’t feeling too bad about it.” She reportedly plans to film a tutorial on her new YouTube channel in the coming weeks.

Her mugshot, in which her glittery makeup is on full display, was released on the Greenville Court House website; it initially went viral on Twitter, and has amassed over 65,000 retweets and 280,000 likes. "We need a tutorial! Free her!" wrote one Twitter user. Plenty of people also inquired about the products that went into her look, which include BH Cosmetics "Take Me Back To Brazil" Palette and Ruby Kisses 3D Artist Contour Powder Palette.

While the Internet is amped up about Marshala’s makeup skills, her arrest speaks to a larger issue at hand: "It was getting to the point where nobody that I was meeting [on campus] was able to tell me, ‘Oh no, I was never arrested down here for marijuana,’ or ‘I’ve never been stopped or searched or anything,'" she told BuzzFeed. According to the interview, several other black Texas A&M-Commerce students have had similar experiences with the police.