Dancehall songstress Lisa Hyper was ordered to return to court on September 10, when she appeared before the Kingston and St Andrew Parish Court on Thursday, May 22, to answer charges of disorderly conduct stemming from a public altercation at the Norman Manley International Airport. The matter was postponed due to an outstanding medical file from the University Hospital of the West Indies (UHWI), where Hyper was previously hospitalized for mental health-related concerns. This latest development marks another chapter in what has been a turbulent period for the artist, born Felicia Gooden, whose personal struggles have increasingly spilt into the public domain.
Despite her legal woes and public scrutiny, Lisa Hyper is channelling adversity into artistry with the announcement of her upcoming EP, The Golden Fleece. Describing the seven-track project as “a new era and a new aura,” Hyper revealed in an exclusive interview with Prism Marketing Consultants that the release reflects her journey of self-reclamation. “I believe I am a Golden Fleece,” she said, signalling her intent to rise above the chaos and redefine her narrative. The EP, though still without an official release date, promises a more evolved and introspective Hyper, one who is reclaiming her creative agency even as the legal and emotional pressures mount.
Earlier this year, the artist narrowly avoided arrest after a bench warrant was issued for her failure to attend a February court date—an absence later justified by medical documentation. That same month, a separate trespassing case in the U.S. was dismissed due to the complainant’s absence. The back-to-back legal entanglements have done little to dampen her resolve.
Lisa Hyper’s unfolding journey touches on broader conversations surrounding mental health in the entertainment industry, especially in Jamaica where the stigma remains potent. Yet, her transparency is helping to shift public sentiment. As the September court date approaches and fans await The Golden Fleece, Lisa Hyper stands at a crossroads between redemption and reinvention—using music not only as an outlet but as a means of survival and self-expression.