Black Madam Speaks: I'm Not on the Lam

Person of interest records video, implies girls still want her services in the midst of butt enhancement controversy

The singer known as “Black Madam,” who remains the person of interest in the death of a 20-year-old British woman who died after allegedly receiving buttock implants from the “Madam," released a video blasting the media, and implying that girls still ask for her services.

“Black Madam is not on the run,” she says while sitting in a dark sound editing room, wearing sunglasses, applying perfume, and talking to an unknown man.

The hip-hop, Goth and funk singer, whose legal name is Padge Victoria Windslowe, recorded a 15-minute video of sporadic conversation, as she and a man seem to be working on her new record “Mind Control” – which she dedicates to the media.

“It’s going out to all the media whose [sic] put a lot of negative things out about me,” she says to the camera. “They don’t know me, but yet they assume – and you know what they say about people assuming.”

Windslowe has been a person of interest since the Feb 7 death of Claudia Seye Aderotimi, who flew from England to Philadelphia to get silicone injected into her buttocks at a Hampton Inn in southwest Philly. According to a police search warrant in February, witnesses say Windslowe administered the injections.

Perhaps the most shocking part of Black Madam’s stream of non sequiturs is a statement, when her phone rings, suggesting that people are still soliciting her butt injection services:

"Out of everything that is going on, my phone is still ringing with girls wanting to come," she said.

While Black Madam berates the media’s coverage of the incident, her biggest issue is not that she has been named by witnesses as the person who dangerously injects silicone into paying customers’ bottoms in hotels rooms. It’s that the media let it be known that she is 41 years old.

“Tell you the truth, out of all the stuff they put out, I was so heated that – how dare they put that I’m 41! I don’t look 41! God no!” she says.

While she repeatedly says she is “not on the lam,” Southwest Detectives told the Daily News that Black Madam’s attorney has been in contact with them but Madam herself refuses to speak with police about the case.

The Madam’s attorney assures police that she will stay local, reports the Daily News. In the mean time, police are waiting for final autopsy results before they move forward with the case.

"Some counties have charged the injectable issue as a misdemeanor in these cases," Police Lt. John Walker told the Daily News. "But our district attorney prefers we wait for toxicology reports to come through, and the determination of death, before we move forward with any charges."

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