‘RHOSLC’ Star Whitney Rose Seemingly Shades Jen Shah After Fraud Sentencing

Hours after 'RHOSLC' star Jen Shah was sentenced for telemarketing fraud, her co-star Whitney Rose took to Instagram to seemingly shade Jen while celebrating her 'WWHL' appearance on Jan. 6.

Reading Time: 3 minutes
whitney
View gallery
Image Credit: Heidi Gutman/BRAVO

Two days after The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City star Whitney Rose, 36, appeared on Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen, 54, she took to Instagram to seemingly shade her co-star Jen Shah, 49. ā€œWWHL with @juliafox and @bravoandy was everything. Season 3 of #rhoslc was a lot and very heavy,ā€ she captioned the post seemingly in reference to Jenā€™s Jan. 6 telemarketing fraud sentencing. ā€œWrapping it with such a fun show was the perfect send off to a difficult season. The darkness is gone, lightness is upon us.ā€

whitney
Whitney Rose seemingly shaded Jen Shah on Jan. 6. (Whitney Rose IG)

In response to Whitneyā€™s seemingly shady post, many of her 367K followers took to the comments section to react to the starā€™s caption. ā€œā€˜The darkness is gone WHITNEY,ā€ a fan commented along with a laughing emoji. A second admirer seemingly noted that the ā€œdarknessā€ Whitney referenced was Jen. ā€œThe darkness was just sentenced to 6.5 years in prison,ā€ the fan penned with a laughing emoji. However, a third follower was quick to tell Whitney to edit her caption and wrote, ā€œPls you still have time to delete the darkness comment lol.ā€

Jen was sentenced to six and a half years in prison on Jan. 6, for her role in a telemarketing scheme. Although Bravo did not comment on the matter, the 49-year-oldā€™s lawyer, Priya Chaudhry, told HollywoodLife, ā€œJen Shah deeply regrets the mistakes that she has made and is profoundly sorry to the people she has hurt. Jen has faith in our justice system, understands that anyone who breaks the law will be punished, and accepts this sentence as just. Jen will pay her debt to society and when she is a free woman again, she vows to pay her debt to the victims harmed by her mistakes.ā€

Whitney sat down next to model and actress Julia Fox, 32, and Andy on Wednesday night to chat about the previous season of the hit Bravo TV show. Notably, the 54-year-old host asked the blonde beauty her thoughts on Jenā€™s sentencing and Whitney did not hold back. ā€œIā€™m really nervous for her and for her family,ā€ the 36-year-old said in response. Prior to that remark, Whitney joked and asked Andy if she should ā€œextend her trip to seeā€ the outcome of Jenā€™s sentencing.

During the Jan. 4 episode of WWHL, Whitney did throw shade during some of the showā€™s segments. When the Bravo executive asked her to reveal who she ā€œleast trusts with a secretā€ of her cast mates, she quickly replied, ā€œJen.ā€ Later, Andy questioned who Whitney will ā€œmost likely need a friendship break from next,ā€ and once again, she declared Jen. ā€œNext aside from Heather [Gay]? Jen.ā€

whitney rose
Whitney Rose at ā€˜WWHLā€™ on Jan. 4. (Heidi Gutman/BRAVO)

Amid Jenā€™s sentencing, the U.S. Department of Justice released the following press release on Jan. 6: ā€œJENNIFER SHAH was sentenced today by United States District Judge Sidney H. Stein to 78 months in prison for running a nationwide telemarketing fraud scheme. SHAH previously pled guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud in connection with telemarketing.ā€ The mom-of-two plead guilty on July 11, 2022, following her March 30, 2021 arrest.

U.S. Attorney Damian Williams noted in the press release that Jen now ā€œfaces the consequencesā€ of her actions. ā€œWith todayā€™s sentence, Jennifer Shah finally faces the consequences of the many years she spent targeting vulnerable, elderly victims,ā€ the statement began. ā€œThese individuals were lured in by false promises of financial security, but in reality, Shah and her co-conspirators defrauded them out of their savings and left them with nothing to show for it. This conviction and sentence demonstrate once again that we will continue to vigorously protect victims of financial fraud and hold accountable those who engage in fraudulent schemes.ā€