
Chase Chrisley is breaking his silence on his parents' planned pardons. "I am grateful to God and extremely grateful to President Trump and his entire administration," the 28-year-oldtold the New York Poston Tuesday evening. "I'm beyond thankful to finally have my parents back home and my family together again!" Kyle Chrisley, Todd Chrisley's estranged son from his first marriage, also commented on the pardons for the first time on Tuesday, telling E! News he was "ecstatic." "Truly. I just found out a little bit ago and I still just can't believe it," Kyle, 33,told E! News. And in a phone call with NBC News on Wednesday, a lawyer for Todd Chrisley's eldest daughter, Lindsie Chrisley, issued a brief statement about the pardons. "When they make a pardon, sometimes presidents get it right, sometimes they get it wrong," Lindsie Chrisley's lawyer, Musa Ghanayem, said. "This time I think he got it right." President Donald Trump said from the Oval Office on Tuesday that he will bepardoning Chrisley's parents, the imprisoned reality television couple Todd and Julie Chrisley. The couple, known for their roles on the TV show "Chrisley Knows Best," was convicted in 2022 of defrauding banks of tens of millions of dollars. During a weekslong federal trial that year, prosecutorssaidthe coupleconspired to defraudAtlanta-area banks of more than $36 million in personal loans, which they spent on luxury cars and travel, by submitting false bank statements and other records. Todd Chrisley was sentenced to12 years in prisonin November 2022 after an Atlanta juryfound him guiltyof fraud, tax evasion and conspiracy to defraud the United States. His wife was sentenced to seven years in prison for the same crimes. The pair sought pardons from Trump in February,NBC News reported. On Tuesday, Trump called Savannah and Grayson Chrisley, two of their children, from the Oval Office to tell them about his plans to pardon the couple. "It's a terrible thing, but it's a great thing because your parents are going to be free and clean," Trump said on the call. "We'll try getting it done tomorrow, so give them — I don't know them — but give them my regards and wish them well. Wish them a good life." A White House official told NBC News on Tuesday that Trump will most likely sign the pardons within 24 hours. A senior Bureau of Prisons official told NBC News Wednesday morning that the bureau has not yet received the pardon paperwork for either Chrisley. White House spokesperson Harrison Fields said in a statement that Trump is "always pleased to give well-deserving Americans a second chance, especially those who have been unfairly targeted and overly prosecuted by an unjust justice system." The announced pardons were among several contentious presidential clemencies in recent months. Then-President Joe Bidenissued a pardonfor his son Hunter Biden on federal gun and tax charges in December andpre-emptive pardonsfor other members of his family as he departed the presidency in January. Soon after, Trumppardoned roughly 1,500 criminal defendantsin connection with the violent attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. On Monday, Trump announced he was pardoningScott Jenkins, a former sheriff of Culpeper County, Virginia. Jenkins was sentenced to 10 years in prison last year for acceptingover $75,000in exchange for giving law enforcement authority to local businessmen, in addition to two undercover FBI agents.