
Todd Chrisley reveals his plans for the future after he and wife Julie chrisley released from the prison in May.
Predecessor Chrisley knows the best Star, 56, shared During an ABC News Special That was stated by Hulu on Sunday, June 29, that he and Julie, 52, hoping to return from Nashville back to their native South Carolina.
“You know, I think we always have a presence of Nashville, but I have a pull for Julie to go back to South Carolina – in that place,” Todd said, ” people.
“And we had plans for what we wanted to do,” he added that his next career step after his apology to the President and releasing prison.
Todd said, “We have hope in claiming a hotel – a mansion – there, we will change in a hotel, and we will make a show around.”
Todd and Julie get back to the content of a new reality reality shown to focus on Chrisley family. During a May 30 Press conference, Todd said he and Julie began filming series “Literally in the evening (Julie and I) have returned home.”
The television television couple was convicted of charges including tax and bank cheating in June 2022, though they kept their innocence. Todd was sentenced to 12 years in prison, while Julie was given seven years of sentences. The couple was released after receiving apologies from the President Donald Trump late last month.
“We thank God … and God touches President Trump’s heart,” Todd Glory Trump on a Saturday, June 29, interview with Fox News’ My view with Lara Trump. “God led people who thanked us. And so I am grateful because I pray that God will bring me back to my wife and children. And he is grateful.”
Todd confirmed that he and his family had the opportunity to thank Trump a video call by dealing with his release in prison.
“(I told him, ” Thank you, you have tied well with my family, ‘” Todd said.
In the same interview, the couple’s daughter Holy in the holy27, which promotes their release, said Trump’s re-election in November is his best chance to jail his parents after a “all time.
“On a personal level, we watched the election, and (my brother Golson, 19) had to vote for the first time,” said Savannah. “And when we looked at it and saw the president’s win, we two began to cry and hugged me and hugged me because we knew that we were just going.”