Get all your news in one place.
100's of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Mark Price

NC teenager dreamed of becoming female. Now a fake doctor is charged with murder

CHARLOTTE, N.C. _ A Salisbury woman is facing a second-degree murder charge after police say she performed an unlicensed plastic surgery procedure that led to the death of a transgender teen.

Media outlets in the teen's hometown of Fayetteville reported that the procedure was silicone butt injections.

Salisbury Police said Eugene Jones II, 19, died after receiving silicone injections from Kavonceya Iman Cornelius, 42, also known as Kenneth Rudolph Cornelius, who is not licensed to do such procedures.

Jones died Jan. 12 in Fayetteville from complications blamed on the procedure, police say. A GoFundMe page set up to offset the cost of Jones' funeral said "a bad silicon (sic) injection ... cut her lungs and caused internal bleeding. Also, the silicon consisted of a substance that poisoned her bloodstream."

On Monday, a warrant for second-degree murder was served on Kavonceya Cornelius, police said. The Salisbury Post reported Cornelius surrendered to authorities. Cornelius was placed in the Rowan County Detention Center under no bond. A first appearance was set for March 22.

WTVD in Raleigh was reporting Monday that Jones was transgender and in the process of transitioning from male to a female named Symone Marie Jones. She started her transition a year ago, beginning with breast implants done by a licensed doctor in Miami, family members told WTVD.

Jones' family says she began reaching out to a "concierge service" working on behalf of what Jones believed to be a licensed medical facility in Charlotte, WTVD reported.

On Jan. 5, Symone received silicone buttock injections in a Charlotte hotel, WTVD reported, but two days later ended up in a real hospital due to an inability to breathe.

Salisbury Police have said they believe Jones' injections occurred in Salisbury, at Cornelius' home.

Investigators say they learned of the unlicensed procedures on Feb. 13, after receiving a tip from another patient who had become ill after receiving silicone injections from Cornelius, police said. "As a result, the victim now has very serious health problems," police said in a statement. That patient, who lives out of state, has not been identified.

Police say the investigation found Cornelius had been conducting these medical procedures with non-medical grade silicone.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100's of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.