The Chrisleys have been placed in home confinement.
The couple was found guilty of bank and tax fraud.
They will be sentenced on October 6.
The Chrisleys were found guilty on Tuesday of bank fraud and tax evasion.
A jury in Atlanta found a reality TV couple guilty of running a years-long scheme in which they used $30 million in borrowed funds to live extravagantly.
Chrisley and his wife became stars of "Chrisley Knows Best" a year after Todd Chrisley filed for Chapter 11. The jury found that the couple and their accountant hid their wealth from the IRS in order to avoid paying their taxes.
Unless they are at work, school, religious service, or seek medical care, Todd and Julie Chrisley must stay at home.
They have to alert their officers whenever they spend over $1,000.
After three days of deliberations, a jury found the couple and Tarantino guilty. Each of the Chrisleys faces a maximum prison term of 30 years when they are sentenced on October 6.
The man who turned them into the FBI was a fraudster.
Mark Braddock admitted to the FBI that he had created fake documents to get loans for himself and the Chrisleys.
Bruce Morris tried to convince jurors that emails from Chrisley's account could have been sent by Braddock, who was granted immunity by the government.
Morris claimed that the emails could have been faked. The jurors were shown that the fraud continued after the Chrisleys died.
Lawyers for the Chrisleys didn't reply to Insider's questions.
You can read the original article.