Countree Hype built a name in dancehall music working with some of Jamaica’s biggest entertainers, but United States prosecutors say the producer was also operating as an illegal gun trafficker supplying weapons to Jamaica. The 33-year-old, whose real name is Taugea Ubert Dayes, has now been sentenced to five years and 10 months in a U.S. federal prison after pleading guilty to firearms smuggling charges in a case that has shocked sections of the Caribbean entertainment industry.
The sentence was handed down in Miami, Florida on Wednesday, where Countree Hype faced two federal counts linked to the illegal shipment of firearms from the United States to Jamaica. On the charge of smuggling goods from the United States, the producer received a 70-month sentence, while he was also sentenced to 60 months for delivering firearms to a common carrier without written notification. Both sentences will run concurrently. He was additionally ordered to pay a US$200 special assessment and will face three years of supervised release following his prison term, although legal observers believe deportation proceedings back to Jamaica are likely upon his release.
Federal prosecutors argued that a prison sentence between 70 and 75 months was appropriate after Countree Hype admitted to his role in the operation. His legal team had reportedly requested a lighter 36-month sentence. According to investigators, the producer allegedly used the fake identity “Jamie Roberts” while organising shipments that included 24 handguns, six rifles, 32 magazines and more than 100 rounds of ammunition. Prosecutors also allege surveillance footage captured him packaging and shipping the weapons.
The case has generated intense conversation across Jamaican social media due to Countree Hype’s strong ties to dancehall culture. Over the years, he became associated with several high-profile artistes including Intence, Alkaline, Konshens and Kraff. Meanwhile, law enforcement sources claimed the producer, who was reportedly trained as both a cook and nurse, had been supplying illegal firearms to criminal networks in Jamaica.
With the sentence now officially handed down, attention is expected to shift toward whether Countree Hype pursues an appeal after Judge Roy Altman confirmed he retains the right to challenge the ruling. The high-profile case also continues to fuel wider discussions surrounding gun trafficking routes between the United States and the Caribbean and the growing intersection between crime and entertainment culture.
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