Jamaican-American singer Sean Kingston and his mother, Janice Turner, have been ordered to pay $38,500 USD in restitution as part of their ongoing federal wire fraud case, a stunning fall from grace for the artist who once topped charts with his breezy hits. The amended judgment, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida, follows Kingston’s sentencing in August, when the 35-year-old star was handed a three-and-a-half-year prison term. Turner, 62, fared worse, receiving a five-year prison sentence. Both will also serve three years of probation after release.
The restitution stems from their elaborate $1 million USD scheme that targeted sellers of luxury goods, including a 232-inch television, a bulletproof Cadillac Escalade, watches, and high-end jewellery. Prosecutors say Kingston and Turner enticed merchants to his Florida mansion with the promise of flashy social media promotion, only to provide fake wire transfer receipts in exchange for the merchandise. “He has no clue about his finances,” Kingston’s attorney, Zeljka Bozanic, argued in court, noting the performer’s remorse and troubled background.
Judge David Leibowitz acknowledged Kingston’s acceptance of responsibility, contrasting it with Turner’s stance, and ruled that half of Kingston’s prison wages and 10 percent of his post-release income would go toward repayment. Meanwhile, Turner, a Jamaican citizen, faces possible deportation after her sentence, which could permanently bar her from returning to the United States.
The arrests came after a dramatic SWAT raid on Kingston’s sprawling Southwest Ranches rental property in May 2024, where Turner was taken into custody. Kingston himself was arrested later the same day at Fort Irwin in California, where he had been performing for U.S. Army personnel. Authorities say 17 additional victims were identified in the case, with many of the goods recovered during the raid.
Once a teenage star with international hits like Beautiful Girls, Kingston now faces years of rebuilding after prison, with restitution hearings scheduled to continue unless an agreement is reached. His saga serves as a cautionary tale of fame gone awry—an artist’s glittering public image undone by the shadows of fraud and deception.

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English (US) ·