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Chrisley’s parents are likely to be the focus of her speech tonight

Tucker Chrisley and the Rulings of the Trumps: Who Are We Really Are? The Ruling Judges in Fulton County, Ga., Over Election Interference

“For the past decade we have been consumed with a different kind of drama, whether it’s my family on TV or you,” she said during a segment at the Republican National Convention on Tuesday night dedicated to safety.

Her comments are in line with those of Trump, who said prosecutors brought indictments against him because of a political agenda. Among many cases against him, he faces criminal charges in Fulton County, Ga., over election interference.

“My family was persecuted by rogue prosecutors in Fulton County due to our public profile — I know, Fulton County, they know how to do it, don’t they — due to our public profile and conservative beliefs,” Chrisley continued.

She’s best known for her show on the USA Network called Chrisley Knows Best. The show focused mostly on her parents, real-estate tycoon Todd Chrisley and his wife Julie.

In June, Julie’s sentence was sent back to a lower court for resentencing after it was reduced to 10 and 5 years.

“I’ll never forget what the prosecutors said in the most heavily Democrat county in the state, before an Obama-appointed judge,” she said on Tuesday. He called us the Trumps of the South.

She said federal prosecutors targeted Trump because of his politics, while not treating Hunter as harshly as he should have been. She also criticized the four-month prison sentence for Steve Bannon, a former Trump White House aide, for refusing to comply with a congressional investigation.

She’s so broken, I’m going to tell you she’s gonna tell me she’ll tell you when she gets sick – and how to get out of there

Prosecutors alleged they submitted fake documents to banks when applying for loans, and used a company they controlled to hide income to keep the IRS from collecting unpaid taxes owed by Todd.

Since she heard about the living conditions of her brothers and niece in prison, she started speaking out about the struggles associated with her parents’ incarceration.

“The heat index was 105-110 degrees, and there’s no air conditioning outside the visitation room,” she said earlier this month, about the Kentucky facility where Julie is living. She got sick from the heat. It’s beyond inhumane.

She told FOX Business this week that her speech will discuss the U.S. Department of Justice, which she described as “so broken that the only option we have is to completely deconstruct it and build it back.”

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