Todd and Julie Chrisley have been serving their respective prison sentences since January, after being found guilty of fraud and tax evasion in 2022. For years they’d been scamming their way into getting loans (to the tune of $30 million) by falsifying bank statements, and also neglected to pay all their tax bills. The federal government finally caught on to their schemes, despite the Chrisleys living a quiet, low-profile life on reality television. And how are the Chrisleys adjusting? Well, you could say that Todd has still found a way to highlight the faults in everything around him, as he famously did on Chrisley Knows Best. He gave a phone interview to Chris Cuomo last week and complained about how awful the prison food is:
Todd Chrisley is speaking out from behind bars.
The Chrisley Knows Best alum — who is serving a yearslong sentence for bank fraud and tax evasion at a federal prison camp in Pensacola, Fla. — alleged that he is being mistreated by staff as a way to “humble him.”
“The food is dated,” he said in a phone interview on the Dec. 8 broadcast of Chris Cuomo’s News Nation show Cuomo. “It’s a year past expiration.”
Todd also accused prison workers of “literally starving” inmates by providing them with “disgustingly filthy” food that allegedly came into contact with wild animals.
“You’ve got rats, you’ve got squirrels in the storage facility where the food is,” he claimed. “They just covered it up with plastic and then tore the ceiling out because of all the black mold and found a dead cat in the ceiling, and it dropped down on the top of the food.”
To avoid eating food made for the prison’s general population, Todd cooks his meals using ingredients purchased with his own money from the commissary. Still, he alleged, staff has been “cutting down” on the amount of food he can buy per week.
“I eat tuna, I eat peanut butter — that’s where I get protein,” the 54-year-old said. “And then I start over again doing the same thing the next week.”
But Todd alleged the mistreatment spanned beyond chow time, claiming that someone once attempted to extort his family from behind bars.
“There was a photograph taken of me while I was sleeping and sent to my daughter,” he alleged, “asking for $2,600 dollars a month for my protection.”
E! News has reached out to Pensacola Federal Prison Camp for comment but hasn’t heard back.
Todd and his wife, Julie Chrisley, were found guilty in June 2022 of conspiring to defraud banks and taking out millions of dollars’ worth of personal loans using false bank statements. He reported to his prison in January, while Julie — who he married in 1996 — began her sentence at a different federal prison in Lexington, Ky.
Their attorney Jay Surgent said in September that the couple’s sentences were shortened, with Todd’s initial 12-year sentence down to 10 and Julie’s seven-year sentence down to five.
Todd and Julie are working to appeal their convictions from prison, leaving their 26-year-old daughter Savannah Chrisley to care for their son Grayson, 17, and granddaughter Chloe, 11.
[From E! News]
Oh my gosh, Grayson is 17 now?? Ugh, I feel old. I only ever saw one episode of Chrisley Knows Best and it must have been from the first season, cause that kid was, well, still a kid. He made a memorable impression: he grabbed a can of coke from the fridge and, despite Father Todd threatening consequences of increasing stakes, that kid drank the damn coke. He did not give a flying f–k. Seven-year-old Grayson had all the power and he knew it, his act of popping open the soda essentially him giving his dad the finger. Sweet kid.
As for Todd’s takedown of the prison food, here’s the thing: the quality of prison food has been a terrible problem for years. He’s not alone in relying on the commissary, or noting serious health concerns. All that can be, and is true, while at the same time it’s awfully rich to hear these complaints coming from Todd Chrisley. The white, Southern grifter is appalled by the food, y’all! Since he’s already getting sprung early, may I humbly suggest Todd dedicate his post-sentence life to advocating for improved prison conditions. (I know, I know, it’ll never happen.)
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