Todd Chrisley FIRED from prison job at chapel over his interactions with other inmates
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Todd Chrisley has been fired from his prison chapel job at FPC Pensacola, a minimum security federal prison camp in Pensacola, Florida.
The Georgia native, 55, who is serving a 12-year sentence in his fraud and tax evasion conviction, was dismissed from the position after prison officials felt he was 'getting too chatty with certain inmates,' his lawyer Jay Surgent told TMZ Wednesday.
The Chrisley Knows Best reality star, who is slated to be released from custody in September 2032, had been serving as a chaplain's assistant at the facility in Florida's Panhandle, said Surgent.
Chrisley's duties in the position included organizing religious services for Christian, Jewish and Muslim prisoners, the attorney told the outlet.
Surgent said that Chrisley had been 'doing a good job' in the job, which was based out of an office neighboring the facility's Residential Drug Abuse Program.
Todd Chrisley, 55, has been fired from his prison chapel job at FPC Pensacola, a minimum security federal prison camp in Pensacola, Florida. Pictured in 2016 in Nashville
The Chrisley Knows Best reality star is slated to be released from custody in September 2032
Authorities at the facility took issue with his communications with prisoners in the drug rehabilitation program, Surgent said, adding that he felt they didn't want Chrisley speaking with prisoners who spend part of their sentences on release from the facility. When asked about the issue, a FPC Pensacola official told the outlet that 'for privacy reasons, we do not comment on the conditions of confinement for any incarcerated individual, including their work detail assignments.'
Surgent said Chrisley remains allowed to attend services at the facility, and is aiming at being rehired into his previous position with the chapel.
Surgent told People that Todd remains 'very disappointed and upset that he can no longer participate in the administration of the set-up for religious services at Pensacola, which includes Christian, Jewish, and Muslim services.'
Overall, according to his lawyer, the situation 'has not affected his firm belief that in the end, God will work things out for him, Julie, and his family.'
Surgent added that the removal of the job for 'associating with inmates' came 'without cause.'
The news about Todd comes four weeks after a federal judge on September 25 resentenced his spouse Julie Chrisley to seven years in prison for her conviction on bank fraud and tax evasion charges, declining the reality TV star's request for less time in prison than was originally imposed.
A jury in 2022 found Todd and Julie guilty of conspiring to defraud community banks out of more than $30 million in fraudulent loans. The Chrisleys were also found guilty of tax evasion by hiding their earnings.
A three-judge panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in June upheld the Chrisleys' convictions but found a legal error in how the trial judge had calculated Julie Chrisley's sentence by holding her accountable for the entire bank fraud scheme. The appellate panel sent her case back to the lower court for resentencing.
Chrisley's duties in the position included organizing religious services for Christian, Jewish and Muslim prisoners, his attorney told the outlet
Prisoners were seen cleaning the outside of FPC Pensacola in January of 2023, when Todd arrived to begin his sentence
Julie Chrisley's attorney, Alex Little, asked the judge to reduce his client's sentence to no more than five years. He argued that she was a minor player in the crimes, that her 'scattered offenses' were 'dramatic mistakes.'
He also noted that she has behaved well and taken advantage of enrichment opportunities during her 20 months in prison so far, receiving more than 70 certificates.
In a court filing, Little had argued that Chrisley's two youngest children are struggling with 'day-to-day functioning' because of their mother's absence.
Federal prosecutor Annalise Peters urged the judge to reimpose the seven-year sentence. She argued that prosecutors had been conservative in charging the Chrisleys, that Julie Chrisley was a 'core part' of a fraudulent scheme and that she had not apologized, shown remorse or admitted wrongdoing.
Chrisley's good behavior in prison does not cancel out an '11-year journey of fraud after fraud after fraud,' Peters said, adding that while she felt sympathy for Chrisley's family but that their suffering was 'a natural consequence of this defendant's criminal choices.'
Chrisley, dressed in a navy blue prison uniform and with her formerly blond hair now dark brown, addressed the judge. She said, 'I apologize for my actions and what led me to where I am today,' later adding that her time in prison has been 'the most difficult time in my life' and has been hard on her family.
'I cannot ever repay my children for what they have had to go through, and for that I am sorry,' she said.
Before the Chrisleys became reality television stars, they and a former business partner submitted false documents to banks in the Atlanta area to obtain fraudulent loans, prosecutors said during their trial.
Todd's legal team said that he felt prison officials didn't want him speaking with prisoners who spend part of their sentences on release from the facility
A jury in 2022 found Todd and Julie Chrisley guilty of conspiring to defraud community banks out of more than $30 million in fraudulent loans. Pictured in November of 2019 in Nashville
They accused the couple of spending lavishly on luxury cars, designer clothes, real estate and travel, and using new fraudulent loans to pay off old ones. Todd Chrisley then filed for bankruptcy, according to prosecutors, walking away from more than $20 million in unpaid loans.
U.S. District Judge Eleanor Ross said that when she originally sentenced Chrisley she took into account her age, health and the fact that she was a caretaker for young children and elderly parents.
Ross said she imposed a sentence that fell below the guidelines for Chrisley's crimes and situation and below what prosecutors had requested. That departure from the guidelines was not based on the loss amount or the number of years that Chrisley was involved, so her sentence will not change, Ross said.
The judge noted that many people she has sent to prison have children and most don't have the resources or the support system the Chrisleys have.
'It saddens me every time I see children going through that,' Ross said, later adding that she reminds herself, 'I am not the one who made the choices to put the children in that situation.'
Two of Chrisley's adult children, Savannah and Chase, attended the hearing. Savannah Chrisley, who spoke in support of Donald Trump's presidential candidacy at the Republican National Convention in July, told reporters outside the courthouse that the prosecution and sentencing of her parents was politically motivated.
'That's what you get with an Obama-appointed judge,' she said as her mother was led out of the courtroom by U.S. marshals. Ross was appointed to the bench by then-President Barack Obama and took the bench in November 2014.
She said her mother will appeal the new sentence. The couple was originally ordered to pay $17.8 million in restitution, but Ross said Wednesday that the amount now stands at $4.7 million.
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