The teen who made a name for herself with the nonsensical phrase “Cash me outside” has been sentenced to five years probation after pleading guilty to several charges in a Florida juvenile court.

Danielle Bregoli, 14, reportedly burst into tears during her sentencing Tuesday in Palm Beach County Court in Delray Beach as her father read a prepared statement to the judge.

“I’m afraid of what she’s being pushed into and who’s profiting from it,” said Bregoli’s father, Ira Peskowitz, according to the Palm Beach Post.

Peskowitz, who works as a sheriff’s deputy in Palm Beach, asked that his teen daughter’s probation be carried out in the area, but Palm Beach County Circuit Judge Lou Delgado permitted Bregoli to carry out her probation in California where she has been living with her mother, according to the news outlet.

Her sentence stems from four separate arrests.

On different occasions last year, Bregoli was accused of stealing her mother’s purse and car and falsely reporting to police that her mother was using heroin by spreading powdered sugar on a bathroom counter and describing it to cops, officials said.

Bregoli pleaded guilty last month to charges of grand theft, marijuana possession and filing a false police report.

She gained internet fame after appearing on Dr. Phil last year, when in an apparent attempt to say “Catch me outside,” she instead said the now infamous, “Cash me outside, how bow dah,”

Following her appearance on Dr. Phil during an episode called “I Want To Give Up My Car-Stealing, Knife-Wielding, Twerking 13-Year-Old Daughter Who Tried To Frame Me For A Crime,” Bregoli spent time at a ranch in Utah for troubled teens.

“It gives you time to think about what you did, why your parents sent you there,” Bregoli said in court of her time at the Turn-About Ranch, according to the Palm Beach Post.

The teen’s mother, Barbara Ann Bregoli, said: “She did a lot of soul-searching at that ranch.”

Bregoli’s most recent arrest, in April, came when she was found in a car with marijuana and the teen told the judge “I regret it very much.”

A representative from the Juvenile Department of Justice said during her court appearance that Bregoli had “significantly changed” in the past year, according to the report.

The conditions of Bregoli’s probation include courses in sexual education, domestic violence and anti-theft, 100 hours of community service and a 5 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew, the Palm Beach Post reported.