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Julie Chrisley and Jerry Harris are locked up in the same prison

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Julie Chrisley

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Julie Chrisley is seemingly sharing the same federal lockup address with Jerry Harris.

Here is everything you need to know.

Julie Chrisley and Jerry Harris will share the same prison

Julie Chrisley checked in at the Federal Medical Center in Lexington, Kentucky this week on Tuesday.

However, Jerry Harris, a former cheerleader has been incarcerated in the same prison since last August.

Although it is a minimum security satellite camp, Harris and Chrisley most likely would not get an opportunity to socialize in the yard.

TMZ reported that the officers at the prison insist on keeping the male and female inmates in separate sections.

In addition, Chrisley was arrested in June 2022 under multiple charges including bank fraud, wire fraud, and tax evasion. Moreover, she served a seven-year prison sentence.

While the prison name might state that it is a medical facility, Chrisley seemingly does not need any medical treatment at the moment.

Additionally, the Federal Bureau of Prisons confirmed that the reasons behind Harris’ incarceration at FMC Lexington are both medical as well as non-medical.

Meanwhile, Harris’s attorney Todd Pugh revealed to TMZ that his client is doing quite well for someone who is serving a prison sentence.

He also mentioned that Harris has supposedly, ‘acclimated himself to custodial life and is participating in every type of self-betterment program available.’

Jerry Harris was arrested for s*x crimes involving minors

Jerry Harris was sentenced to twelve years in prison by a federal judge in Chicago. He pleaded guilty to two to seven charges of sex crimes with a minor.

According to reports, Harris coerced several teenage boys to send him obscene photos and videos of themselves. Moreover, he also solicited s*x from minors at cheerleading competitions.

Meanwhile, the U.S. District Judge Manish Shah ordered that Harris will get eight years of court-supervised release after he completes his prison sentence.

He added that Harris should consider the sentence as an ‘expression of the seriousness of your crimes. Tempered with some hope that all is not lost for you or for your victims, and that in the future some healing can occur.’

Harris issued an apology to his victims before he was sentenced to spend twelve years behind prison bars.

He said, ‘I am deeply sorry for all the trauma my abuse has caused you. I pray deep down that your suffering comes to an end.’

Additionally, he stated, ‘I’m not an evil person. I’m still learning who I am and what my purpose is.’

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