Todd Chrisley and wife Julie are speaking out after they were found guilty of bank fraud and tax evasion.
26.05.2022 - 19:31 / perezhilton.com
[Warning: Potentially Triggering Content]
A jury has convicted the woman who wrote an essay titled How to Murder Your Husband of doing just that.
On Wednesday, romance novelist Nancy Crampton Brophy was found guilty for fatally shooting her husband Dan Brophy in June 2018.
During the trial, prosecutors said the 71-year-old scribe could have potentially gained a large amount of Dan’s insurance money upon his death. Witnesses alleged that the pair were suffering hard times financially when Dan was murdered in the Oregon Culinary Institute, where he served as a chef and teacher.
Related: Psychologist Says Amber Heard HAS To Be Lying About PTSD — Here’s Why
Previously, Judge Christopher Ramras ruled that Nancy’s self-published 2011 essay would not be included in evidence, stating:
In the facetious piece, Nancy described the perfect way to kill one’s husband, writing:
Clever she was not, however. Prosecutors pointed out that Nancy’s van was spotted near the institute on traffic cameras on the day Dan was shot multiple times while preparing for his shift. Prior to the killing, Nancy had looked up and bought a “ghost gun” kit online before purchasing a Glock 17 handgun while at the Portland Gun Expo. Prosecutors also noted that the writer had lied about where she was on that morning.
Moreover, Andrea Jacobs, one of Nancy’s former cellmates, testified that the writer told her Dan was shot two times to the heart, adding that Nancy “showed me the distance,” showing the length with her arms.
During her testimony, Nancy admitted she and Dan had money issues, but claimed they were going to downsize their home and that they only bought life insurance policies for their retirement plan. She alleged that she looked into ghost guns as
Todd Chrisley and wife Julie are speaking out after they were found guilty of bank fraud and tax evasion.
found guilty in their tax fraud trial, Todd and Julie Chrisley's bond conditions changed to include house confinement and electronic monitoring.«After the verdict was read, the judge changed the bond on both of the Chrisleys,» legal expert Julie Rendelman told ET. «First, they are now on home confinement although they can go out for doctors' visits and the like.»According to the couple's bond condition form, which was obtained by ET, Todd and Julie will be restricted to their residence at all times except for employment, education, religious service, health treatment, attorney visits, court appearances, court-ordered obligations, or other activities as pre-approved by the Court or probation officer.Rendelman noted that «there is also electronic monitoring, which is controlled by probation.»Per the bond condition form, the couple must pay all or part of the costs of the Location Monitoring Program based upon their ability to pay as determined by the probation officer.On top of all of that, Rendelman said, «one of the biggest things that changed is that any spending for either of them over $1,000 they must inform probation,» something that she imagines will not be «an easy task for the Chrisleys, considering their previous spending habits.»The spending condition, she said, is one that she's «never seen as a recommendation as part of a bond.»The couple's bond conditions come after a federal jury found Todd and Julie guilty of conspiring to defraud community banks out of more than $30 million of fraudulent loans.«What they basically did is they provided fraudulent documents to financial institutions in order to procure those loans,» Rendelman explained to ET.
Brad Pitt wants his day in court!
A doctor who asked a Muslim woman to take off her veil and criticised her English skills during an appointment has been found guilty of misconduct.
The duo who star in USA Network’s most-watched current original series, Chrisley Knows Best, were convicted on multiple counts of bank fraud and tax evasion by a federal jury in downtown Atlanta today, according to multiple local reports.
It’s looking real bad for Todd and Julie Chrisley!
Todd and Julie Chrisley have been going through a major trial in Atlanta over conspiracy to commit bank fraud and tax evasion and the verdict is finally in.
Todd and Julie Chrisley, from the long-running reality show "Chrisley Knows Best," were found guilty on all charges of bank fraud and tax evasion in an Atlanta, Georgia courtroom on Tuesday. The couple was initially indicted in August 2019, and a new indictment was filed in February, where the couple faced 12 counts of bank and wire fraud, tax evasion, and conspiracy over a nine-year period, all of which they denied. Chrisley attorney Bruce Morris told Fox News Digital: "Disappointed with the verdict.
After a weeks-long trial, a jury has reached a verdict in Todd and Julie Chrisley’s fraud case.
Todd and Julie Chrisley have been found guilty in their tax fraud trial. On Tuesday, after a nearly three-week-long trial, the couple was convicted on all counts by a federal court in Georgia, reports.Todd was convicted of conspiracy to commit bank fraud, bank fraud, conspiracy to defraud the United States and tax fraud, per.
Content warning: This article discusses allegations of sexual assault.Jacob Hoggard, the former frontman for defunct Canadian pop-rock band Hedley, has been convicted of sexual assault.On Sunday (June 5), a Toronto jury found Hoggard guilty of one count of sexual assault causing bodily harm against an Ottawa woman. He was acquitted of the same charge involving a woman who was 16 years old at the time of the alleged incident. He was also found not guilty of sexual interference.The separate assaults are alleged to have taken place in 2016.
Canadian musician Jacob Hoggard has been found not guilty on two out of three counts after jurors reached a verdict in the sex assault trial of the former Hedley lead singer.
What comes next. Johnny Depp’s reaction to Amber Heard’s verdict in his defamation case against her shows how he’s looking forward to his life now that their trial is over.
vs. defamation trial came to a close on June 1. At 3 p.m.
Despite Zach Roloff’s hopes to take over the family’s Roloff Farms, Matt Roloff announced plans to sell the property — soon inciting a familial rift.
A teenage boy has been found guilty of the murder of 12-year-old schoolgirl Ava White. Ava was fatally stabbed in the neck Liverpool city centre on November 25 last year.
William Earl Jeffrey Cooper, an architect and member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, has been convicted after a jury trial on three counts of felony child molestation, the Los Angeles Times reported Friday.The jury’s verdict came May 20 at Los Angeles Superior Court in Van Nuys. Cooper was arrested four years ago and indicted on eight counts involving two children. Judge Alan Schneider declared a mistrial on the five counts brought by the second child.Cooper pleaded not guilty to all counts.
Los Angeles Times reports. While Cooper was indicted on eight counts of sexual abuse, judge Alan Schneider declared a mistrial on the remaining five, after a grand jury was unable to reach a verdict. Cooper’s criminal trial began May 9 in Los Angeles Superior Court in Van Nuys, following his arrest by LA Special Victims Unit detectives in June 2018.