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NY Post
New York Post
25 May 2023


NextImg:Feds want Jen Shah’s ‘RHOSLC’ earnings to help pay her fraud victims

The feds are going after “Real Housewives of Salt Lake City” alum Jen Shah’s show earnings, claiming she and her co-defendants haven’t paid any of the $6.7 million restitution owed to victims of their telemarketing fraud scheme.

Manhattan federal prosecutors are asking a judge to sign off on an order to garnish 25% of the 49-year-old Bravolebrity’s disposable earnings from Shed Media, Inc. — the company that owns the Bravo show.

The order says the earnings should continue to be paid to the court clerk until Shah’s release date on Aug. 30, 2028.

As of February, the media company owed Shah $34,500 — her salary for one episode of the reality show, court papers show.

And 25% of the disposable earnings on that — or $5,128 — is set to be garnished by the court to go toward the restitution, according to the court filings.

Shah and her co-defendants were ordered to pay $6,746,378, and prosecutors said the restitution amount “remains unpaid” as of Thursday.

The feds want to take Jen Shah’s earnings from the “Real Housewives of Salt Lake City” to pay back victims.
SplashNews.com

In March, prosecutors were seeking to seize two pieces of expensive jewelry from Shah to cover a separate forfeiture fee of $6.5 million repaying her ill-gotten gains.

At the time, the feds said they couldn’t track down all of the assets that she had purchased with swindled cash, but said they located a diamond-encrusted pendant necklace and an 18-karat rose gold and diamond ring.

The disgraced reality star was sentenced to six-and-a-half years behind bars in January in a 10-year scheme spanning six states in which she and others targeted hundreds of elderly people by offering bogus business services, pocketing the cash and then leaving victims with “services” that were all but worthless.

Jen Shah

Shah is set to be locked up until 2028 for her involvement in a telemarketing fraud scheme.
NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

Shah helped provide leads for possible victims of the phone scam. She also tricked investors — most of whom were over age 55 — to invest in online projects and sold phony business services.

At her Manhattan federal court sentencing, she broke down into tears, asking for forgiveness and promising to pay back the people she stole from.

Shah pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud in July 2022 and faced up to 30 years for the crime.

Shah’s rep, Chris Giovanni, told TMZ Thursday that his client is worried about her safety after photos of her at a Texas prison were leaked online.