Lauryn Hill began serving a
three-month prison sentence in Connecticut
on Monday for failing to pay about $1 million in taxes over the past decade.
Hill
reported to federal prison in Danbury ,
said Ed Ross, a spokesman for the federal Bureau of Prisons. Inmates at the
minimum security prison live in open dormitory-style living quarters and are
expected to work jobs such as maintenance, food service or landscaping.
Hill, who
started singing with the Fugees as a teenager in the 1990s before releasing her
multiplatinum 1998 album "The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill," pleaded
guilty last year in New Jersey to failing to pay taxes on more than $1.8
million earned from 2005 to 2007. Her sentencing also took into account unpaid
state and federal taxes in 2008 and 2009 that brought the total earnings to
about $2.3 million.
Her
attorney had sought probation, arguing that Hill's charitable works, her family
circumstances and the fact she paid back the taxes she owed should merit
consideration.
During her
sentencing in May in Newark ,
N.J. , Hill described how she
failed to pay taxes during a period when she'd dropped out of the music
business to protect herself and her children, who now number six. She said the
treatment she received while she was in the entertainment business led to her
decision to leave it.
Assistant
U.S. Attorney Sandra Moser acknowledged Hill's creative talent and work on
behalf of impoverished children but called Hill's explanation for her actions
"a parade of excuses centering around her feeling put upon" that
don't exempt her from her responsibilities.
After she
is released from prison, she will be under parole supervision for a year, the
first three months of which will be spent under home confinement.
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