Real Housewives of Salt Lake City star Jen Shah to surrender today

‘She’s committed to serving her sentence with courage’: Real Housewives of Salt Lake City star Jen Shah to surrender today to begin 6.5 year prison stint

  • Shah will report today to a federal prison in the south-central region 
  • She asked to be sent to FPC Bryan in Texas, a minimum security prison camp 
  • Shah, 49, pleaded guilty to running a years-long telemarketing scheme 

Real Housewives of Salt Lake City star Jen Shah will begin her 6.5 year prison sentence today. 

The 49-year-old asked to be sent to FPC Bryan, a minimum security prison for women in Bryan, Texas. 

It remains unconfirmed whether the judge granted her request; the judge recommended that she should be sent to one of the federal camps in the south-central region, which includes Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico. 

In a statement, her attorney, Priya Chaudhry, told DailyMail.com she was ‘committed to serving her sentence with courage and purpose’. 

Jen Shah (shown during her sentencing hearing in January) will report to prison today 

Shah asked to be sent to FPC Bryan, a minimum security camp in Bryan, Texas 

Shah, the loud-mouthed outcast of the Bravo show she appeared on, pleaded guilty to fraud last year in a sensational U-turn. 

She had for months protested her innocence both on-air and on social media. 

She admitted running a years-long telemarketing scheme which targeted vulnerable elderly people, duped them into buying fake business mentoring  

‘Jen Shah’s resolve to make her victims whole and to turn her life around is unyielding. 

‘She is committed to serving her sentence with courage and purpose, fueled by her desire to make amends for the hurt she has caused and to help others in her new community.

‘No obstacle will deter Jen from making the most of her time in prison and she’s determined to make restitution to those whose lives she has impacted.

‘Her path ahead will be filled with challenges, but with the unwavering love and support of her family and friends, Jen is prepared to face these challenges head-on and emerge from this experience a better person who makes a positive impact on others.’ 

Shah and her son got matching tattoos yesterday ahead of the start of her sentence

At her sentencing hearing last month, Shah begged for mercy as she told the judge how sorry she was. 

Shah’s victims were swept into never-ending payments or subscription services which they couldn’t – or didn’t know how to – get out of. 

At her sentencing hearing, prosecutors told how she callously laughed with colleagues when some of the victims called them in tears begging to be released from the debts. 

Federal prosecutors sought a prison term of 10 years for Shah while her attorneys suggested she should serve three. 

They rejected her promises of remorse, and pointed to how she turned the criminal proceedings into a personality trait and line of merchandise.

‘For nearly a decade, the defendant was an integral leader of a wide-ranging, nationwide telemarketing fraud scheme that victimized thousands of innocent people. Many of those people were elderly or vulnerable. 


Police seized dozens of counterfeit bags and pieces of jewelry from Shah’s home 

The 49-year-old is one of the most bombastic characters in the Bravo series she stars in 

‘Many of those people suffered significant financial hardship and damage. 

‘At the defendant’s direction, victims were defrauded over and over again until they had nothing left. 

‘She and her co-conspirators persisted in their conduct until the victims’ bank accounts were empty, their credit cards were at their limits, and there was nothing more to take. 

‘Despite the defendant’s best efforts, she got caught. 

‘She then went on a public offensive and tried to profit off the charges by selling ‘Justice for Jen’ merchandise. She pled guilty at the eleventh hour, only after receiving the Government’s trial exhibits and witness statements. 

‘In light of her conduct and her post-arrest behavior, her belated expressions of remorse ring hollow,’ US Attorney Damian Williams wrote. 

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