Julie Chrisley will reportedly have to clean up her prison cell and keep it as clean as possible, or her weight will go up. Julie Chrisley is also responsible for getting up every day at 6 a.m. to make her bed, sweep, mop, empty the trash, and make sure her jail cell is clean and tidy for official inmate counts.
A source got a copy of the inmate handbook for the Federal Medical Center Lexington. It says that the “Chrisley Knows Best” star and her cellmate must keep their small cell clean because it affects their meal rotation.
Unit meal rotation is ordinarily based on weekly sanitation ratings of each unit,
the handbook reads.
The unit with the highest sanitation is called first, and the unit with the lowest rating is called last.
Julie Chrisley has to clean her bed, trash, and floors. She also has to make sure that the lockers, shelves, and chairs in her cell follow the rules set by the authorities.
Lockers must be neatly arranged inside and out, and all shelving must be neat and clean. Chairs are assigned to each cell, and will not be defaced or marked in any manner by the inmate,
the handbook continues, as per the outlet.
Everyone is responsible for cleaning up after themselves.
Another rule says,
sexually suggestive photographs are NOT authorized for display outside of the individual locker or cabinet.
When she is not there, her cell door must stay shut. She also can’t use cardboard boxes or other paper containers to store things. When the disgraced reality star got to the Kentucky prison, she was told to check her cell right away and report any damage. The source says that if she didn’t, she might have to pay for them if the police found them later when they were counting.
According to her official count schedule, she counts five times every 24 hours. Julie Chrisley is expected to be at the bedside for official counts at 4 p.m. and 9 p.m. during the week and 10 a.m., 4 p.m., and 10 p.m. on weekends and holidays, as well as for any emergency counts. The handbook also says that “inmates must actually be seen at all counts, even if the inmate has to be woken up,” unless “the inmates are on out-counts in areas like Food Service, Health Services, Visiting, etc.”
Julie Chrisley and her husband, Todd Chrisley, both went to prison this week after being found guilty of stealing more than $30 million from banks. Julie is serving seven years, and Todd is serving 12 years.