Even prisoners are allowed to splurge on some good food to enjoy at Christmas. If celebrity prisoners have enough commissary money they can enjoy anything from assorted chocolates to jalapeño cheese.

TMZ reported which snacks Bill Cosby, R. Kelly, Michael Cohen, Suge Knight, and Billy McFarland can purchase.

Cosby is located at SCI Phoenix in Pennsylvania. According to the outlet, Cosby is not able to purchase any special treats in the commissary due to them not offering any snacks for the holidays. Cosby was sentenced three to 10 years after multiple women came forward accusing the actor of drugging and sexually assaulting them.

Kelly can purchase snacks at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Chicago. Reportedly, the defamed singer can buy up to $410 in holiday cookies, pound cake, jalapeño cheese, and chocolate bars. Kelly is also in prison for sexual abuse-related charges. In early September, the Chicago Tribune reported that he was moved to the general population.

Cohen, who used to be Trump’s personal attorney, is serving his time at a federal correctional institution in Otisville, New York, for making payments to silence women during the 2016 election after claiming they had affairs with the then-presidential candidate. His $410 at the commissary can get him holiday cakes, chocolate and caramel clusters, assorted chocolates and an olive salad.

Knight, a former record producer and co-founder of Death Row Records, is located at San Diego’s Richard J. Donovan Correctional Facility for manslaughter. He can purchase chocolate caramel Santas and peppermint bark. Christmas cards are also available for purchase at his commissary.

McFarland is serving time at a federal correctional facility in Elkton, Ohio, for wire fraud. His $340 can get him smoked oysters, chocolate covered pretzels, mint crème cookies, peanut logs, hazelnut single serve creamer packs and white queso dip. McFarland is behind the infamous Fyre Festival that left many people helpless in the Bahamas.

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This image shows Bill Cosby walking out of a courthouse after a hearing in his 2004 sexual assault case in Norristown, Pennsylvania, Aug. 22, 2017. Michael Bryant-Pool/Getty Images