Fugate a ‘Natural Born Killer’ or Starkweather victim?

There’s a lot to unpack in “The 12th Victim.”

Showtime’s riveting four-part documentary recounts 19-year-old Charles Starkweather’s random killing spree in and around Lincoln, Neb. in late 1957 and early 1958 that claimed 11 lives — the first horror show to play out in real time on television as the entire state went into lockdown while the madman, a twisted James Dean wannabe with an IQ of 70, was on the loose. The murders have since been mythologized in pop culture: movies including “Badlands” and “Natural Born Killers“; songs such as Bruce Springsteen’s “Nebraska” and Billy Joel’s “We Didn’t Start the Fire” (which includes the line “Starkweather homicide”).

Starkweather was convicted and executed in 1959, which leaves us with the subject of “The 12th Victim”: Caril Ann Fugate, the 14-year-old girlfriend/witness to Starkweather’s carnage who accompanied him, whether willingly or unwillingly, on his homicidal rampage. She was freed from prison in 1976 after serving 18 years of a life sentence — and to this day she still divides public opinion: was she Starkweather’s blinded-by-love, cold-hearted accomplice or a petrified, manipulated child unaware that he brutally killed her own mother, stepfather and 3-year-old half-sister — depositing their bodies in the backyard and stuffing her mother, Velda, into an outhouse toilet and sexually violating her?


Caril Ann Fugate, 14, and Charles Starkweather, 19, before the Nebraska killing spree. Starkweather implicated her in some of the murders.
Courtesy of SHOWTIME

Photo of Fugate immediately after her arrest in 1958. She's wearing the coat of murder victim Clara Ward. An older woman has her arm around her shoulder as Caril looks down.
Fugate after she and Starkweather were arrested in 1958. She’s wearing the coat of murder victim Clara Ward.
Courtesy of SHOWTIME

(Fugate and Starkweather lived in her parents’ house in Lincoln, Neb. for five days after those killings. Fugate insisted from the get-go that Starkweather told her that her family was kidnapped — and that they would be safe as long as she went along with his murderous rampage, which included a farmer, two well-liked high school students — Starkweather sexually molested the female victim — and a wealthy Lincoln businessman, Lauer Ward, his wife, Clara, and their maid, Lilyan Fencl. Caril was wearing Clara’s jacket when she was arrested.)

“The 12th Victim” goes a long way toward setting the record straight, at least according to director Nicola B. Marsh. She’s utilized a wealth of archival footage, re-enactments and interviews with experts, authors and even Fugate’s childhood next-door-neighbors to paint a portrait of a frightened teenager railroaded by Nebraska authorities embarrassed by letting Starkweather escape their clutches for so long — and who needed Fugate to fit their “modern-day Bonnie & Clyde” narrative, evidence be damned. The documentary is “inspired by” Linda M. Battisti and John Stevens’ book, “The Twelfth Victim: The Innocence of Caril Fugate in the Starkweather Murder Rampage” (they’re both interviewed).


Caril Ann Fugate on TV in the 1980s. She insisted she did not know until after she was arrested that Starkweather killed three members of her family.
Courtesy of SHOWTIME

But, really, the most important person seen and heard in “The 12th Victim” is Fugate herself. She’s now known as Caril Clair (after marrying Fred Clair in 2007; he was killed in a car accident in 2013) and, nearing 80, suffered a serious stroke in 2014. But her voice is strong and clear throughout “The 12th Victim,” dating back to a disastrous first-person interview she did with a Nebraska TV reporter before her trial in 1958 — which aired on NBC’s “Today Show” — to her many post-prison TV appearances including “A Current Affair” and a 1983 guest spot on “Lie Detector,” a syndicated series hosted by F. Lee Bailey in which she sat for a lie-detector test … and passed with flying colors. Also featured intermittently throughout the documentary are audio recordings of Fugate undergoing hypnosis in 1989 to help prove her innocence.

It’s all very compelling, but I’m guessing “The 12th Victim” still won’t sway a number of those people old enough to remember the case and its immediate aftermath. I do think, though, that anyone watching the documentary with an open mind, or those who eschew the standard, well-worn Starkweather narrative of a psycho killer and his 14-year-old starry-eyed girlfriend, will find compelling evidence that Fugate/Clair is the only person who knows what really happened in Nebraska — and that her version of those shocking events is the most reliable.

“The 12th Victim” premieres Feb. 17 at 8 p.m. on Showtime.



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‘Whose Line Is It Anyway’ fate in the air as star claims unfair wages

Colin Mochrie has been making viewers laugh on “Whose Line Is It Anyway?” for years — but he claims in a new interview that his paycheck is actually a joke.

The 65-year-old comedian told Vulture that he has a love/hate relationship with the long-running improv TV show, which stars Mochrie, Wayne Brady and Ryan Stiles alongside host Aisha Tyler.

Inspired by the British show of the same name, the American version of “Whose Line Is It Anyway?” first aired on ABC from 1998 to 2007. The CW revived it in 2013.

Mochrie tweeted in November that the show would come to an end with its 20th season, which would begin filming in January before premiering in March. Vulture reported Wednesday that the CW said Mochrie’s claim was “not accurate” and that “no decision has been made at this time about next season.”

But Mochrie tells Vulture: “Everyone at the show — producers and actors — are calling this the last taping. The short answer is that if it comes back, it probably won’t be with this cast.”


Colin Mochrie performs at the Astor Theatre on Oct. 15, 2013, in Perth, Australia.
WireImage

“There is a complicated relationship with the show,” Mochrie explained to the outlet. “The cast loves each other, and the actual shooting is always fun. We are all grateful that the show gave us a showcase and allowed us to be able to tour.”

“The downside is that we never received fair compensation for the success of the show,” Mochrie claimed. “We provide the content but don’t get paid as ‘writers.’ We never received residuals for a show that’s been shown around the world since its inception.


Ryan Stiles, from left, Wayne Brady, Aisha Tyler and Colin Mochrie of “Whose Line Is It Anyway?” are photographed on July 30, 2013.
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“Seeing announcements about the sale [of] the show overseas or to HBO Max can get irritating,” he added.

Mochrie said he hopes he isn’t coming off as “bitter” in this interview. He admitted he finds it “odd” that people still tweet at the cast to bring the show back because it’s been back for nine years.

“So the short answer is, as of now, this is the last season with this cast,” he reiterated. “The longer, more vague answer is that it’s like the Mafia: It keeps pulling us back, so who knows?”

The Post has contacted The CW for comment. A rep for Mochrie told The Post he has no further comment.

While “Whose Line” may not return, The CW announced last month it will broadcast the controversial start-up golf league LIV Golf.



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Joy Behar gets emotional over losing her ‘The View’ friends

Joy Behar revealed she was “happy” to be fired from “The View” in 2013 — because she lost all her friends on the show.

The hosts of the daytime talk show were discussing workplace friendships on Wednesday when show guest Behar, 80, got emotional about the time she was ousted from the show, saying she was glad because her friends had already left.

“I always have friends where I work, and if I don’t have friends at the job, I will not keep the job,” Behar said. “So, when I was fired last time from this show, people say to me, ‘Were you okay with that?’ and my answer is, I was happy, because all my friends had left already. So, there was no reason to stay anymore. I mean it.”

Behar was one of the original “View” co-hosts who helped launch the show with the late Barbara Walters in 1997. 


Joy Behar revealed she was “happy” to be fired from “The View” in 2013.
ABC

Joy Behar got emotional about the time she was ousted from the show.
ABC

But not everyone on the panel was so thrilled with Behar’s appreciation for leaving.

Whoopi Goldberg was already a permanent member of “The View” panel by the time Behar left, and she shed a fake tear over the revelation.

“Really? All your friends left?” Goldberg, 67, questioned.

She then faked a cry with a quivering lip, joking, “It’s OK, I’m cool.”


Joy Behar was one of the original “View” co-hosts who helped launch the show with Barbara Walters in 1997.
ABC

“You had just come on, and my backstage friends had left. And I don’t like to work when I don’t have friends,” Behar quickly clarified.

Goldberg said that she was only “teasing” and that they had “been friends for a long time.”

The “Sister Act” star joined the view in 2007 and sat on the panel with Behar long before her exit in August 2013. 

Behar returned to the show in 2015 while also fronting two solo talk shows: “The Joy Behar Show” and “Joy Behar: Say Anything!”


Whoopi Goldberg and Joy Behar had “been friends for a long time.”
Bruce Glikas/FilmMagic

But Behar promised she’s not going anywhere this time, likening herself to Joe Biden.

“Joe Biden and I are the same age. Would you say I could not do my job for the next four years? Of course I can,” Behar said. “And the haters can go stick their heads in something, because I’m not moving out of this seat.”

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Ashley Graham defends decision to stop breastfeeding twins

Ashley Graham is clapping back at criticism over her decision to stop breastfeeding her twin sons.

“There’s this whole thing with people telling you how to feed your child,” the model told Chelsea Handler on “The Daily Show” Tuesday.

“With my first kid, I was like, ‘I can only breastfeed! This is the right way!’” she continued of son Isaac. “Then I had the twins, and I was like, ‘I’m not doing this. This is not working here. Both of you want both of these? This is a lot of work.’”

Graham, 35, noted that since she stopped nursing five months after welcoming Malachi and Roman, the boys have since grown “so strong and so happy” on formula.

“I don’t think we should be telling people how we should be feeding our kids,” she concluded.

Ashley Graham defended her short-lived breastfeeding journey with her twin sons.
ashleygraham/Instagram

The “A New Model” author became a mom in January 2020 when she gave birth to Isaac, now 3, followed by her now 1-year-old twins two years later.

Graham joked on the Comedy Central late-night show that the little ones have left her “fully depleted of everything.”

“Your body fills up with nutrition, and then the baby sucks it out of you,” she explained. “You get acne, the weight doesn’t come off, [and] your boobs go down to here when you’re done.”

The Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue cover girl admitted she was wearing two bras under her white Balmain dress during the interview, saying, “It’s fine.”

“I don’t think we should be telling people how we should be feeding our kids,” the model said.

Graham said in May 2022 that having kids has “reshaped” her relationship with her body.

“I’ve learned it’s OK if the journey to love the skin you’re in is more complex than you could ever have imagined,” she told Glamour at the time, adding that she still did not feel “entirely comfortable” in her body.

However, the “American Beauty Star” host gushed, “I am bold, I am brilliant, I am beautiful. We all are.”

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Ashley Benson, 33, reportedly dating oil heir Brandon Davis, 43

She would make a Pretty Little Heiress.

Ashley Benson is reportedly dating Brandon Davis, the grandson of oil tycoon Marvin Davis.

While it’s unclear how long the rumored couple has been together, a source told People on Friday that “they have a lot of mutual friends and are both super fun and very social people.”

Despite remaining quiet about their relationship on social media, it appears Benson and Davis, 43, aren’t trying to keep their love under wraps as they’ve been spotted together numerous times over the past couple of weeks.

Most recently, the “Pretty Little Liars” star, 33, and Davis joined Emma Roberts and her boyfriend, Cody John, for a double date in Los Angeles.

Sources told People the pair were linked through mutual friends.
GC Images

The foursome hit it off as they chatted and smoked a cigarette outside a restaurant before heading back inside to grab a bite to eat.

The new couple was also photographed sitting courtside at a basketball game and at a friend’s birthday party.

News of Benson’s new beau comes following the end of her on-again, off-again relationship with rapper G-Eazy.

The rumored couple have been spotted together multiple times over the last month.

The rumored couple have been spotted together multiple times over the last month.


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The now exes — who first started dating in 2020 — were last linked at a 2022 Oscars party.

Although sources say the twosome — who once sparked engagement rumors — “looked very much in love,” their romance seemingly fizzled out shortly after.

Before her relationship with the rapper, Benson dated Cara Delevingne for two years.

Benson prefers to keep her dating life out of the public eye.
Instagram/Ashley Benson

However, after facing backlash for moving on with G-Eazy just one month after her split from the model, Benson opened up to Cosmopolitan UK about why she often keeps her dating life private.

“The most annoying part is having to sit back and be quiet while everybody talks about you and you have to deal with it,” she said. “People can say whatever they want about me, but unless you know me, you don’t really know anything at all.”

The 33-year-old previously dated Cara Delevnigne and G-Eazy.
Instagram/Ashley Benson

“I usually keep my relationships private,” she continued. “You obviously can’t help if you get photographed together. [But] it’s more sacred that way. Those private moments are for you and your partner, and I think it’s best not to be over-exposed, and you can really protect your relationship if you’re not exploiting it.”

The oil heir — who has earned himself a bad boy reputation around Hollywood — has also dated his fair share of celebs, including “The O.C” star Mischa Barton, model Brittny Gastineau and Paris Hilton.

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‘RHOC’s Emily Simpson shows before-and-after facelift photos

Emily Simpson is a big fan of her facelift.

The “Real Housewives of Orange County” star showed her Instagram followers before-and-after photos from a recent procedure on Thursday.

“A couple years ago I was watching myself on TV, and to my utter surprise I realized that I had completely lost my jawline,” the former Bravo personality wrote.

She blamed the change on “being middle-aged, gaining 30 pounds and then losing it” and menopause.

“After a lot of research and three consultations,” the ex-reality star underwent a “mini lower face/neck lift.”

Simpson gushed over her “amazing” results, joking, “I still look like myself … just like myself before my jawline packed up and left town.”

She added, “I still work out hard and work out consistently, but once you reach a certain age there are just things you cannot change naturally. I choose a combo approach.”

The lawyer, who has also gone under the knife for breast implants (which she eventually removed), reminded trolls that plastic surgery is her decision to make.

She gushed over the “amazing” results.
emilysimpson/Instagram

“All women are allowed to choose what they do with their bodies and how they would like to age. From completely natural to surgery,” Simpson wrote.

The party planner teased “another [recent] surgery” that she will reveal soon.

The Bravolebrity is a “Real Housewives of Orange County” cast member.
NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

Simpson joined the “RHOC” cast in 2018. Ahead of Season 16 in 2021, the reality star had her facial fillers dissolved.

“The filler had migrated on my face and there was too much right underneath my eyes,” she told People at the time.

“It gave me what I call ‘The Cabbage Patch Kid’ look, which made me lose my eyes,” Simpson continued. “The area directly under my eyes was too puffy.”



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Kyle Richards ‘cannot stand’ Ozempic rumors: It’s ‘frustrating’

One more time for the people in the back!

Kyle Richards has issued another Ozempic denial, calling rumors that she takes the diabetes-turned-weight-loss drug “frustrating.”

The “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” star “cannot stand” the speculation, she told Extra on Wednesday.

“Sometimes I turn my cheek the other way and ignore it, but I work really hard and it really bothers me,” the Bravo personality, 54, explained. “I would like to be able to be an inspiration to people.

“So don’t think I took the easy way out,” she continued. “Follow what I’m doing and you’ll see changes.”

Kyle Richards is trying not to let “frustrating” Ozempic rumors “bother” her.
Getty Images for The American He

The reality star clarified that she slimmed down by working out “for two hours every day.”

Richards explained, “I really put a lot of effort into my diet and exercise and taking care of myself, so when people like to think I took the easy way out, it’s frustrating.”

The reality star insists she did not take “the easy way out.”
kylerichards18/Instagram

The actress first clapped back at rumors last month, telling an Instagram hater that she has “never” tried Ozempic.

“This is not from plastic surgery,” she added in the January commnet. “I’m honest about what I do. But if giving plastic surgery the credit makes you feel better then pop off.”

The actress credits gym time and diet changes with her recent weight loss.

The actress credits gym time and diet changes with her recent weight loss.


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The actress credits gym time and diet changes with her recent weight loss.

The actress credits gym time and diet changes with her recent weight loss.


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The following week, the “Little House on the Prairie” alum elaborated on her fit figure on Teddi Mellencamp and Tamra Judge’s “Two Ts in a Pod” podcast.

“After gaining weight during the summer … I said, ‘That is it. I’m not having any sugar, any carbs, any alcohol,’” Richards told listeners on Jan. 23.

Richards has denied using the diabetes drug on multiple occasions.
Kyle Richards / Instagram

Except for enjoying “a bit of birthday cake” now and again, the “Halloween” star has stuck to her diet.

Richards dismissed allegations of Ozempic use at the time, noting that she hasn’t used Mounjaro, a similar medication, nor “any of the shots.”

While Khloé Kardashian and other stars have denied losing weight with the drug, Chelsea Handler admitted to trying Ozempic without realizing during a “Call Her Daddy” interview.

“I’m not on it anymore,” the comedian said in January. “I’m an irresponsible drug user, but I’m not gonna take a diabetic drug.”

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Pamela Anderson wears ‘Baywatch’ red dress to Netflix doc premiere

This “Baywatch” babe is red-hot.

Pamela Anderson, 55, channeled her most infamous fashion moment in a fiery red dress for the premiere of her much-anticipated Netflix documentary, “Pamela: A Love Story.”

Pam hit the red carpet in a Naeem Khan Beaded Tank Gown ($5,995) reminiscent of the iconic one-piece swimsuit she wore as C.J. Parker on the ‘90s hit show, down to the sexy scoop neck. 

The Playboy centerfold paired the gown with Cicada dangling diamond earrings and a Delfina Delettrez ring.

Anderson further accessorized with strappy crimson Christian Louboutin sandals.

The “Love, Pamela” memoirist was styled by Los Angeles-based celebrity stylist Rebecca Ramsey, who also dressed her for her new Variety cover.

The Canadian actress even brought back her messy updo.
Matt Baron/BEI/Shutterstock

Anderson walked the red carpet alongside her son, producer Brandon Thomas Lee

The “Chicago” musical star even opted to bring back her messy updo from the “Baywatch” era, which experienced a resurgence last year when it was embraced by Gen Z.

Anderson skyrocketed to fame on “Baywatch” when it began airing in 1992.

Anderson skyrocketed to fame on “Baywatch” when it began airing in 1992.


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Anderson skyrocketed to fame on “Baywatch” when it began airing in 1992.


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“Pamcore” has been trending on TikTok recently, on the heels of the release of last year’s controversial Hulu show “Pam & Tommy,” in which Lily James played Anderson.

Anderson walked the red carpet alongside her son.
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Anderson did not approve of the series, which detailed her leaked sex tape and volatile marriage to Mötley Crüe drummer Tommy Lee.

Anderson paired her ruby gown with matching strappy sandals.
Getty Images for Netflix

The actress and sex symbol opens up about her first major acting gig on “Baywatch” in her documentary.

The “Baywatch” babe stunned in the swimsuit-inspired tank dress.
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“We were having a ball. We couldn’t even believe that we were working because we were on the beach every day getting paid for this,” Anderson says in the film. 

“You can watch that show with the sound off, actually,” Anderson quips in the doc. “It wasn’t actually about the storylines.”



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Jeff Bezos girlfriend Lauren Sanchez didn’t make ‘The View’

When Lauren Sanchez left Fox to start contributing to “Extra,” she was ready for her TV career to take flight. But she didn’t reach her dream destination.

The 53-year-old TV host and helicopter pilot who has catapulted into the public eye with her relationship with Amazon founder Jeff Bezos in 2019, recalled in an interview with WSJ Magazine the moment she felt like her career was crashing down in 1999. She didn’t get her dream job — a role on Barbara Walters daytime talk show “The View.” 

“It was one of the most devastating days of my life,”  Sánchez told Derek Blasberg in an interview with WSJ Magazine published Wednesday. 

Sanchez recalled bonding instantly with Walters while auditioning for “The View,” though she admitted clashing with original cast member lawyer and journalist Star Jones, 60. Their differences may have cost her the role. Instead, journalist Lisa Ling took the coveted spot alongside Jones, Meredith Vierra, Joy Behar and Walters, who personally phoned Sanchez to tell her the disappointing news that left her in tears for days. 

Sanchez said Jones later apologized and that Walters remained a mentor. 


Lauren Sanchez (from left) on “The View” with Star Jones and Barbara Walters.

“She [Walters] really helped me with my career. Not only as someone I looked up to, but really guided me when I was up for The View,” Sánchez told WSJ Magazine after Walters died in December. 

“Producers were trying to make me dress extra conversative and she saw me and said, ‘What happened?’ She said, ‘They will try and make you ordinary. Don’t let them. Then, if you fail, at least you fail as yourself.’ I never forgot that.” 

She found the silver lining in the career setback. 

“It turned out to be a good thing because I wouldn’t have had Nikko,” Sánchez said of giving birth to her first child, who is now 21, with former NFL tight end Tony Gonzalez. 

“Everything happens for a reason,” she said.


Sanchez, 53, an Emmy-award winning TV host and helicopter pilot, catapulted into the public eye for her relationship with Amazon founder Jeff Bezos in 2019.
Daniel Jack Lyons for WSJ. Magaz

Before TV, Sanchez initially wanted to be a flight attendant. At age 18, she moved to Los Angeles with hopes of working for Southwest Airlines. Her weight thrawted her from landing the role.

“Back then, they weighed you, and I weighed 121 pounds,” she told WSJ Mag of a required weigh-in she failed back in 1989, during the time weight restrictions were common in the industry. “They said, ‘You need to be 115.’”


Lauren Sanchez and Jeff Bezos.
Getty Images

Today, she said, she’d clap back saying: “I don’t want to be a stewardess. I want to be the pilot!” 

Her relationship with Bezos has also taken flight with the duo jet setting to the likes of the Taj Mahal, hiking with King Charles in Scotland and getting chatty with Leonardo DiCaprio at the LACMA gala.

Sanchez cut her teeth in Hollywood at age 28 when she landed a small role as a TV reporter on “Fight Club” in 1999 doing a breaking news segment on underground boxing clubs.

“Jared Leto calls me hot—I peaked!” she quipped.

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Todd and Julie Chrisley’s fall from grace: The inside story

When the Chrisley family burst onto the reality scene in 2014 with USA Network’s “Chrisley Knows Best” they were the Southern-blond answer to the Kardashians: wealthy and extremely tight knit, with a dollop of “bless your heart” attitude.

In an early promo for the show, Todd Chrisley, the flamboyant, controlling-but-endearing patriarch bragged about the money he supposedly made in real estate. He was quick to note that his family — wife Julie and their three children, Chase, Savannah and Grayson, now ages 26, 25 and 16 respectively, along with Todd’s children from an earlier marriage, Lindsie, now 33, and Kyle, 31 — lived in a gated community outside of Atlanta. They were neighbors with former Braves great Chipper Jones and singer Usher, Chrisley boasted, and the fam dropped a cool $300,000 a year on clothing alone.

The Chrisley family pose for a portrait during their first season. (Pictureed left to right) Savannah Chrisley, Lindsie Chrisley Campbell, Julie Chrisley, Todd Chrisley, Kyle Chrisley, Chase Chrisley, Grayson Chrisley
NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via

“I try to keep everything in order and in line. I have a certain level of expectations for my children, for my wife, for myself,” Chrisley, now 53, said in the promo.

But the family’s wealthy facade all came crumbling down last spring when Todd and Julie were found guilty of bank fraud and tax evasion in a sensational trial. Now the show’s over: On Tuesday, Todd and Julie will report to prison, where he’s been sentenced for 12 years and she to seven.

“The Chrisleys have built an empire based on the lie that their wealth came from dedication and hard work,” prosecutors wrote in a sentencing memorandum on Nov. 16.

“The jury’s unanimous verdict sets the record straight: Todd and Julie Chrisley are career swindlers who have made a living by jumping from one fraud scheme to another, lying to banks, stiffing vendors, and evading taxes at every corner.”

Todd and Julie Chrisley leaving Atlanta Federal Court in August 2022.
FOX 5 Atlanta

The couple had humble, wholesome beginnings. They both hail from rural Westminster, South Carolina, a once-thriving textile town that as of 2021 had a population of around 2363.

Their money troubles go back years, before they even had a reality show. In 2012, Chrisley filed for Chapter 7, listing $4.2 million in assets and $49.4 million in debt. At the time, he claimed to have only $55 in a checking account and $100 in cash.

“He guaranteed a real estate development loan and it failed,” his attorney Robert Furr explained to People in 2014. “He was on the hook for $30 million. If he hadn’t had that happen, he would have been fine, financially.”

Such money issues didn’t keep the family from reality stardom. By the end of 2016, the Chrisley’s show was already in its fourth season and the clan’s profile was on the rise — so much so that security concerns led them to relocate to Nashville.

Todd and Julie Chrisley in 2018.
Getty Images

There, they bought two mansions worth roughly a combined $9 million and continued to drive flashy cars while their kids became podcasters and Instagram influencers with millions of followers.

Amid his success, Chrisley offered to donate money in 2016 and build an aquatic center in his hometown of Westminster with one condition: It had to be named for his late father Gene Chrisley.

But what looked like a generous gesture from a hometown boy-made-good quickly devolved into an ugly conflict that divided the locale and showcased Todd’s uncanny ability to whip up drama even when the cameras weren’t rolling.

“Most doubted the offer was sincere, but the [town] council remained open in learning more,” former town administrator Chris Carter told The Post.

The Chrisley family in the in a season 8 promo.
NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

When the project stalled, Todd took to Facebook blasting detractors, some of whom were private citizens of Westminster. He bragged about his show’s ratings and flashed their Facebook profiles across the screen, urging his own followers to confront them online.

“Facebook brought out the trolls who posted pretty negative things about the town because of the city’s perceived reticence to take Chrisley [up] on the offer. Lots of them, I understand, did not even live in the Westminster area — the show’s groupies I suppose,” said Carter.

He added that Todd then created an additional stipulation for his donation: that the town’s council, except for one woman, resign.

Todd and Julie Chrisley purchased this six-bedroom, 10-bathroom home back in 2019 for $3,37 million.
Zeitlin Sotheby’s International

“Most peple felt like in the town they were being played and it turned out they were. Other than for the show drama of it, there was nothing substantive ever talked about. It was all to gin up animosity and division,” continued Carter.

In the end, no money was donated and no pool was built. A few locals said the saga, which was covered in the local press, was just another chapter in the ostensibly fabulous life of the self-styled mogul.

“He’s all hat and no cattle,” quipped one local. (Chrisley did not respond to a request for comment on the matter.)

Meanwhile, the family’s personal dramas were making for good TV.

Back in 2015, Todd Chrisley posed behind bars as a joke.
Todd Chrisley /Facebook

While it often focused on lighthearted family conflict such as sibling rivalry, Savannah’s pageants and household pranks, “Chrisley Knows Best” didn’t shy away from serious issues. Kyle struggled with drug addiction and mental health, so much so that Todd and Julie legally adopted his daughter Chloe, now 10, when she was a toddler.

In 2019, Savannah and Chase launched their own spinoff, “Growing Up Chrisley.” It would go on to run for four seasons — until Todd and Julie were convicted, at which point both it and “Chrisley Knows Best” were abruptly canceled.

The trial also took an ax to Todd’s reputation of being a devoted family man. His former business partner Mark Braddock testified that he and Todd were intimate for about a year in the early 2000s.

Chrisley has denied the claims.

Todd Chrisley and his family in happier times.
NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via

“What insulted me the most is that, out of all these 54 years, for me to finally be accused of being with a man, it would be someone who looked like Mark Braddock,” Todd said on a recent episode of his podcast “Chrisley Confessions.” He added that Braddock resembled a “toad.”

The Chrisleys are just the latest reality show stars to face federal charges. In 2014, “Real Housewives of New Jersey” stars Teresa and Joe Giudice both pleaded guilty to several counts including bankruptcy fraud, conspiracy to commit both mail fraud wire fraud as well as failing to pay taxes.

Earlier this month, “Real Housewives of Salt Lake City” star Jen Shah was sentenced to six-and-a-half-years in prison for heading a years-long telemarketing scam that targeted elderly Americans

But, the Chrisleys are maintaining their innocence.

“As a family, we are still united and standing firm in our positions and in our faith. We don’t waiver in our faith,” the patriarch said on the podcast. “Now listen. Are we disappointed? Are we hurt? Yes, but we know that God has a purpose for everything.”



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