Jen Shah, formerly of the Real Housewives of Salt Lake City, has made her first public remarks since being released from prison.
The 52-year-old served a total of 33 months behind bars for her role in a long-running nationwide telemarketing fraud scheme.
Shah pled guilty to wire fraud charges tied to the multimillion-dollar con, which duped thousands of victims, many of them seniors. In addition to her prison time she was ordered to pay more than $6.5 million in restitution.
She was originally given 78 months in 2023, but her sentence was repeatedly slashed for good behavior and she was let out this past December to serve the rest of her time at home.
In her first post-jail interview, she declared: 'I was wrong. I made wrong decisions. I should have done things differently,' via People.
Shah then sensationally revealed she and her husband, football coach Sharrieff Shah, were 'separated' and on the 'verge of a divorce' while the scam was in progress, such that her 'judgment' was 'clouded' by 'my own personal pain.'
Jen Shah, formerly of the Real Housewives of Salt Lake City, has made her first public remarks since being released from prison
Shah's arrest in March 2021 was famously captured on Bravo cameras during season two of The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City.
She initially proclaimed her innocence, even doubling down during reunion specials, but ultimately changed her plea to guilty in July 2022—months after her former assistant and co-conspirator, Stuart Smith, admitted his role.
'I should have been more diligent. And I'm deeply remorseful and sorry for my actions and for my part. I take full responsibility,' she said in her new interview.
'It's a long and a very complex journey that brought me to this point,' she said. 'And without re-litigating it, I became involved in the case because I made horrible business decisions and I disregarded huge red flags.'
The former reality star stated: 'I allowed the lines to be blurred between personal friendships and ethical business practices. And in essence, I trusted the wrong people at a very vulnerable time in my life.'
Prosecutors said Shah participated in the compilation of 'lead lists' of victims of the scam, in which the financially vulnerable were sold bogus 'business services.'
She stood accused of helping set the prices victims were charged, and of deciding which supposed services would be sold to whom.
Moreover, the case against her stated that she had a hand in the cover-up operation, which involved offshore accounts and encrypted messages.
Shah then sensationally revealed she and her husband, football coach Sharrieff Shah, were 'separated' and on the 'verge of a divorce' while the scam was in progress
In her new interview, however, the disgraced TV personality maintained that she 'thought I was doing the right thing for the majority of the time. I was working under people who were running these companies.'
Shah painted herself as having believed she was offering legitimate 'fulfillment' to the customers of the companies where she worked.
'What happened was down the line, people that I worked with were working with a lot of other people. Once that initial fulfillment was happening, things were happening beyond the point of sale with that customer that I didn’t know about,' she said.
'It can happen if you’re not careful, if you’re not being diligent and you’re not paying attention to the red flags. But you have a responsibility once you’re in that position to make sure it doesn’t,' Shah allowed.
She then, however, reverted to her previous self-exculpatory vein, saying: 'What's important for me to say — and I need to let people know — was at the same time, my involvement in this conspiracy overlapped with my own personal pain.'
Shah revealed: 'My husband and I were separated. We were on the verge of a divorce. I was overwhelmed with immense grief from the death of my grandmother, my father and my aunt, all in a very short period of time. I was spiraling deeper into my previously diagnosed clinical depression.'
She insisted that 'the reason I say all that is not as an excuse. Because it's not like I was making good business decisions and then I woke up one morning and all of a sudden it's like: "Oh, I made a bad business decision."
'This is the totality of everything that was going on and the overlapping of what I was dealing with personally. And I tried to avoid and numb all of that with alcohol and just avoid it. I trusted the wrong people at a very vulnerable time in my life.'
Shah formed a bond with inmate Elizabeth Holmes and the pair were seen interacting on more than one occasion (pictured)
In her new interview, she also pulled back the curtain on the trial, revealing that the decision to switch her plea from not guilty to guilty came when she was presented with a tranche of evidence for the prosecution that felt 'like a train hit.'
She claimed: 'That was the first time I saw all of it — the communications, the interviews, the witnesses. I saw for the first time that there were people who were hurt. That there were actual victims as a result of this conspiracy. I had never seen anything with my own eyes. That changed things for me.'
Shah served her time at the minimum-security women's Federal Prison Camp in Bryan, Texas, which has acquired the nickname 'Camp Cupcake,' a title also given to the West Virginia prison that once contained Martha Stewart.
However Shah said that her first day behind bars 'took my breath away,' complaining: 'You hear people say it’s "Camp Cupcake" — it’s not. It’s prison. I just thought: "This cannot be where I'm going to be every day."'
Now, she is arranging to pay the $6.5 million court-ordered restitution and has 'made it my mission to make sure that people are paid back,' Shah said.
The Bureau of Prisons reduced her sentence on account of her good behavior, involvement in prison programming, and the restitution payments she had at that point already begun sending to the victims.
Originally set for release in 2029, her date was bumped up to August 2028, then to December 2027, and again to November 3, 2026 before she was finally permitted to leave custody on December 10, 2025.
Sharrieff, who remained with her through the storm of her scandal and imprisonment, was seen picking her up from the facility upon her release, along with two men who appeared to be the couple's grown sons Sharrieff Jr and Omar.
Shah, 52, was freed from the Federal Prison Camp in Bryan, Texas, in the early hours of December 10, so that she could serve the remainder of her sentence at home
Federal Prison Camp in Bryan, Texas has been home to a number of celebrity jailbirds, including Jeffrey Epstein's former girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell and disgraced Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes.
In an unusual twist of fate, Shah bonded with fellow inmate Holmes, who is serving an 11-year sentence for fraud.
On multiple occasions, the pair were spotted working out together in the prison yard.
In December 2024, Shah gave her fans an update as she served her sentence.
Her team shared a message to her website called Dear Jen Shah to share that she was 'doing very well' and was also focused on working on her 'personal self.'
It was also added that Shah was 'focused on her journey towards positive rehabilitation' and had the chance to hold a conversation with co-star Meredith Marks on the phone.
'Jen has indeed spoken with Meredith Marks [co-star], and the conversation was extremely positive. She loves Meredith and appreciates her friendship and support during this time.'

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