Jennifer Shah, a tearful and distraught member of “The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City,” was sentenced Friday for defrauding thousands of people in a telemarketing scheme that lasted nearly a decade.
U.S. District Judge Sidney H. Stein sentenced Shah, 49, as the leader of a national fraud that targeted people who could not afford to lose their money and were often unsophisticated in electronic technology.
Shah pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges in July. The prosecution sought a 10-year sentence for Shah, which would have been one year in federal sentencing guidelines’ minimum recommendation. However, it would have been much longer than Shah’s lawyer recommended.
Stein warned the packed courtroom of Shah’s friends, family, and media members that he wasn’t sentencing the same person as what they see on TV at the beginning of Friday’s hearing.
Stein stated that such a person was simply a character. It’s acting.” He said that housewives “involves role-playing.” … It is a highly scripted operation.
Shah echoed his words and told the judge, “Reality TV does not have anything to do with reality.”
She offered her condolences to the “innocent” people she had hurt and promised to pay $6.5million in restitution when she is released.
Shah stated, “I struggled for the longest time to accept responsibility because I deluded myself into believing…that I did not do anything wrong,” calling it her “own fractured reality.”
She said that she had been manipulated and duped for years, “for many years I blamed others”
“I am the only one responsible for my horrible decisions.” Shah stated that it was all my fault and all of my wrongdoing. Shah said, “I have nobody to blame except myself. … I wish that I could have seen beyond myself the damage I was causing, and made a change. “I am deeply and profoundly sorry.”
Priya Chaudhry, defense lawyer, stated that her client had undergone a dramatic transformation over the past few months.
“Remorse is possible even if it comes late. … She said, “Her apology is sincere.”
Shah left court without speaking with reporters after the sentencing. She will report to jail at a later time.
Robert Sobelman, Assistant U.S. attorney, said Shah was the leader of a “clear fraud” that spanned from 2012 to March 2021. Bogus services were promoted as allowing people to make large amounts of money online. He called Shah the most guilty among more than 30 defendants.
He said that she knew exactly what she was doing wrong, and noted her attempts to slow down the investigation by lying to investigators. She also took evasive measures to hide her true role in fraud.
Prosecutors claimed that she lived a luxurious lifestyle, with a mansion measuring nearly 10,000 square feet and eight fireplaces, in Park City, Utah. They stated that the home is currently for sale at $7.4million.
She claimed that she also rented an apartment on Midtown Manhattan and leased a Porsche Panamera.
She also appeared to make fun of the charges by claiming that Shah-mazing was the only thing she is guilty of. Then she made a profit by selling “Justice for Jen” merchandise following her arrest.
Shah stated that proceeds from merchandise sales will be donated to victims at sentencing.
However, the judge stated that victims might be financially compensated, but not emotionally.
Stein stated, “Their lives have been turned upside down.”
Source: AP