Victims say that while Jennifer was showing off rings and handbags, they were watching their savings disappear.
This didn’t come out of nowhere either. Last year, several people who had invested in Christian’s business sued him, accusing him of running what was essentially a Ponzi structure.
On “Basketball Wives,” we saw Jennifer standing firmly by his side, pushing back on any suggestion that he was a scammer.
Castmates confronted her about a woman on disability who claimed she lost $30,000. They pointed out that Christian is a convicted felon and questioned whether he should even be trading.

Jennifer brushed it off, insisting he didn’t know some of these people and acting like it was all an attack against her relationship.
Reality hit in court, and it hit hard. Christian was properly served and named in the lawsuit. He was listed as representing himself, didn’t hire a lawyer, didn’t respond, and didn’t show up.
In fact, he didn’t put up any defense at all. Because of this, the court granted a default judgment.
The original claim was for $120,000, but since the case was filed under Georgia’s RICO laws, the court tripled the damages.
Christian is now officially ordered to pay $367,625.
This isn’t a rumor anymore, and it’s not just something the girls are using for a storyline. A judge has stamped it.
On paper, he owes serious money, and the victims are legally allowed to collect.
The stories from those victims are disturbing. Many of them were convinced by Christian’s image: the cars, the jewelry, his association with a known TV personality like Jennifer.
For a lot of people, seeing someone on reality TV, or attached to a famous cast member, makes them feel safer.
Christian allegedly used that.
He positioned himself as a seasoned trader with a “lifetime membership” program, charging around $1,500 for access while promising to handle the trades himself.
One investor said she paid the fee, was told to go to Cash App and buy Bitcoin, and then never heard from him again.
She says she just wants her money back while watching him flash rings and luxury vehicles online.
Others described a classic payout pattern.
When older investors asked for their money back, Christian would try to persuade them to keep it in.
If they pushed, he would pay them using funds from newer investors, making it look like the system was working and returns were real.
Behind the scenes, according to the lawsuit, there were no genuine trading accounts, no actual investment portfolio.
The money was just being shuffled, with Christian holding onto a big chunk while feeding people false hope and delay tactics.
It’s the textbook blueprint of a Ponzi-style operation: use new money to pay old promises until the whole thing collapses.
The collapse is now here.
Once Christian stopped making payments and started blocking communication, the victims went full legal.
The court gave him an opportunity to fix things. Even after the default judgment, the judge said that if Christian paid the court costs within ten days, the default could be opened again, letting him submit a defense and tell his side.
That was his last lifeline.
He did nothing.
On January 12, 2026, the judgment became final.
No more cushions, no more excuses.
The victims are now fully empowered to pursue whatever legal avenues they can to get their money back.
Meanwhile, Christian, the man who couldn’t stop talking when cameras were rolling, has gone very quiet.
No public statements, no court appearances, just silence.
And who’s left in the front line? Jennifer.
The same woman who spent an entire season of reality TV defending him is now the one with her back against the wall.
She’s posted text messages from people praising his “investing skills,” trying to prove he helped some folks.
She even wrote, “The weapon was formed, but it didn’t prosper,” implying that the attacks against them won’t win.
But the reality is, if Christian has no real money of his own – and the court documents suggest that he’s not exactly sitting on liquid assets – someone is going to end up carrying the fallout.

When your spouse is publicly tied to you, when their alleged scheme funded your lifestyle, and when you’ve defended them on camera, you don’t get to walk away untouched in the court of public opinion.
Even if Jennifer didn’t know the full extent of what was happening at first, she certainly knows now, and people are questioning how long she’s really been in the dark.
That’s where the “police on her neck” part comes in – not necessarily because she’s been charged with anything, but because the public, the victims, and possibly investigators are looking closely at her role.
Did she unknowingly benefit from the money?
Did she turn a blind eye once the red flags started waving?
Or did she knowingly ride along for the luxury, hoping the storm would never hit?
We don’t have legal proof tying her to the paperwork of the scheme itself, but morally and reputationally, she’s already in it.
A lot of viewers are losing patience with her pattern.
People point out that Jennifer’s been in similar situations before, attracting men who bring chaos, not stability.
Some say she’s so fixated on the title of “wife” and the optics of being paired up that she ignores obvious danger signs.
Others are harsher, claiming that at this point she’s not just unlucky – she’s complicit, because she kept backing Christian publicly when she knew there were serious accusations and real victims.
Comments online are brutal, calling her a “scam magnet” and saying that if she continues defending him after a court judgment, she’s part of the problem.
The saddest part is that Jennifer doesn’t have to live like this.
She’s successful in her own right, looks incredible, has fame, and had every opportunity to choose differently.
Instead, she’s once again tied to a man who appears, on paper, to be a liability rather than a partner.
While he allegedly disappears into the shadows now that it’s time to pay up, she’s the one left to face cameras, critics, and possibly questions from authorities about how deep her knowledge went.
Whether or not law enforcement eventually decides to look at her more directly, the damage is already done.
Her name is now attached to yet another scandal involving money, manipulation, and a man who doesn’t seem to have her best interests at heart.

This isn’t just a messy breakup; it’s a legal mess involving hundreds of thousands of dollars and people who say they were misled by someone Jennifer chose to align her image with.
So did Jennifer “have it coming”? That’s for people to decide for themselves.
What’s clear is that she’s once again paying a very high price for the company she keeps.
The courts have spoken on Christian. The victims are lining up to collect.
And Jennifer, whether she cries, prays, or posts motivational quotes, can’t escape the fact that this time, the storm isn’t just swirling around her – it’s at her front door.