After listening to the news that President Donald Trump will forgive the reality shows TV, Todd and Julie Chrisley, who turned time for tax evasion and bank fraud, his daughter, Savannah Chrisley, in a video on Instagram published on Tuesday, celebrated the news.
“The president called me personally as I entered the Sam Club and notified me that I was signing paper paper for my two parents,” Chrisley said in the Instagram video. “Then my two parents return home tonight [Tuesday] or tomorrow [Wednesday]And I still don’t think it’s real. I’m going crazy, the fact that the president called me. “
“I will always be grateful for President Trump, his administration and all on the road, all my lawyers, the people who put innumerable hours and effort and love for my family to make sure that my parents will get home,” the 27 -year -old continued.
Chrisley emphasized that his parents now have a “new beginning” thanks to forgiveness.
“My parents can start their lives … President Trump not only traveled with his prayers, he gave them a complete unconditional forgiveness. So, I am always grateful,” Chrisley said.
Savannah Chrisley had previously appealed to the Trump administration for the pardons of his parents and spoke at the National Republican Convention of 2024.
The couple, which became famous for their “Chrisley Knows Best” program, was sentenced in November 2022 to 19 years of prison for charges that include tax fraud and evasion.
Todd Chrisley was sentenced to 12 years in prison and 16 months of probation, while Julie Chrisley received the order to serve seven years in prison and 16 months of probation. The couple was also ordered to pay $ 17.8 million in restitution.
“Chrisley knows better” he premiered in 2014 and followed the luxurious lifestyle of the rich real estate developer Todd Chrisley and his family.

Archive: Julie Chrisley, on the right, and her husband Todd Chrisley possesses for photos in the 52nd annual awards of the Annual Country Music Academy on April 2, 2017 in Las Vegas.
JORDAN STRAUSS/INVISION/AP
The charges against the Chrisley are derived from the activity that occurred at least as soon as 2007, when the couple allegedly provided false information to banks and banking states manufactured by requesting and receiving millions of dollars in loans, according to the office of the United States prosecutor.
In 2014, two years after the alleged bank fraud scheme ended, the couple is accused of manufacturing bank extracts and a credit report that “had been cut and stuck physically or stuck when requesting and obtaining a lease contract for a home in California.”
In a telephone interview with ABC News on Tuesday, Savannah Chrisley told ABC News that Trump’s call came out “totally out of nowhere.”
“I had somehow reached a place where I had lost hope, and I felt that nothing was going in my favor. And then I received the call … it was just a shock, and the president was very friendly and loving. It’s why my family is being together again,” Chrisley said. “I have always supported him already his administration, and I will continue supporting them and fighting for them.”