Husband of Tennessee cop fired for having sex with multiple officers is state park ranger
Ex-cop Maegan Hall said that she and her husband, Jedidiah Hall, were in an open marriage —
although he did not seem to be on board, according to an internal investigation at the La Vergne Police Department.
According to Hall’s Facebook page, she and Jedediah were married on May 23, 2018.
Born in Chapel Hill, Tennessee, Jedidiah said the time he spent in Henry Horton State Park as a child inspired him to work with Tennessee State Parks.
“Without much money to travel, Henry Horton became my family’s go-to summer destination. Growing up on the trails and swimming in the river made me fall in love with our state parks and being in the outdoors,” he
wrote in a blog for the parks department.
Jedidiah Hall had initially planned to become a teacher, he said. However, while working towards his master’s degree at Middle Tennessee State University he was hired by Henry Horton State Park as a Seasonal Interpretive Recreator over the summer.
“That summer changed my life, and I decided to teach park visitors about Tennessee’s history and natural resources,” he wrote.
He said that his favorite part about working for the state parks department “is witnessing the look in our visitor’s eyes when they connect with our state’s natural or cultural resources.
That “wow” moment makes all of the hard work worth it, and it makes me fall in love with our park system all over again.”
He also encouraged anyone interested in joining the state parks department to start by volunteering at their local parks picking up garbage and helping with waterway clean-ups.
Maegan Hall, who joined the force in 2021, and her fellow law officers allegedly engaged in wild affairs that included exchanging nude pictures, taking her top off at a hot tub party, and even having oral sex with two officers.
Hall was ultimately fired for the misconduct along with Sgt. Lewis Powell, Officer Juan Lugo, Sgt. Ty McGowan and Detective Seneca Shields.
Two other officers who allegedly had romps with Hall — Patrick Magliocco and Larry Holladay — kept their jobs but were suspended, according to reports.
In the Dec. 28 report, Magliocco said he had seen Hall and Holladay kiss while watching football at a party, and said Hall had kissed his own wife, Amy, after learning they had an “open marriage,” according to the document.
The officer said Jedidiah saw the kiss and told officials he “really wasn’t on board” with his wife having a threesome with the Maglioccos, but she continued having a relationship with him, investigators said.
Magliocco also noted he had become concerned about Hall’s mental health and heavy drinking. He said Hall had once pulled the trigger on an empty gun pointed at her temple “so she could hear what it sounded like” and said she was suffering from mental illness.
Powell initially denied that he had a sexual encounter with Hall, but said “everybody knows she has multiple partners,” as he named Holladay and McGowan to investigators
Holladay admitted under questioning to having sex with Hall “multiple” times, and McGowan revealed that he once went to Hall’s house with another female and exposed his genitals, according to the report.
After initially denying having sexual relationships with Powell and Magliocco, Hall later fessed up to the affairs and also admitted having sex with Lugo at a motel after they met at a Go Cart center — a charge that Lugo initially denied before caving under a second interrogation.
Under questioning, Shields said, “I have never had sex with Maegan Hall,” until admitting she had performed oral sex on him while on duty when pressed.
An repeatedly-mentioned event in the report was a Memorial Day party in a boathouse owned by another member of the department, to which several officers had brought their children.
At one point during the party, an “intoxicated” Hall was reportedly being force-fed vodka by Magliocco in the hot tub, at which time her top came off, and other cops stopped the former officer from drinking and helped her cover up “to protect her,” according to the report.
HR Director Andrew Patton, who authored the report and conducted the investigation, sanctioned the eight officers with various penalties for “sexual activity while on duty, sexual harassment, conduct unbecoming of an officer, and lying during the course of the investigation.”
Husband of Tennessee cop fired for having sex with multiple officers is state park ranger (msn.com)
Jedediah is a TRUE cuckold...
Cuckold: A cuckold is the husband of an adulterous wife; the wife of an adulterous husband is a cuckquean. In biology,
a cuckold is a male who unwittingly invests parental effort in juveniles who are not genetically his offspring.[1]
A husband who is aware of and tolerates his wife's infidelity is sometimes called a wittol or wittold
NOT TO BE CONFUSED WITH CUCKOLD FETISH...
Unlike the traditional definition of the term, in fetish usage a cuckold (also known as "cuckolding fetish")
is complicit in their partner's sexual "infidelity"; the wife who enjoys "cuckolding" her husband is called a "cuckoldress" if the man is more submissive. The dominant man engaging with the cuckold's partner is called a "bull".
If a couple can keep the fantasy in the bedroom, or come to an agreement where being cuckolded in reality does not damage the relationship, they may try it out in reality. This, like other sexual acts, can improve the sexual relationship between partners. However,
the primary proponent of the fantasy is almost always the one being humiliated, or the "cuckold": the cuckold convinces his lover to participate in the fantasy for them, though other "cuckolds" may prefer their lover to initiate the situation instead. The fetish fantasy does not work at all if the cuckold is being humiliated against their will.
Psychology regards cuckold fetishism as a variant of masochism, the cuckold deriving pleasure from being humiliated. In his book Masochism and the Self, psychologist Roy Baumeister advanced a Self Theory analysis that cuckolding (or specifically, all masochism) was a form of escaping from self-awareness, at times when self-awareness becomes burdensome, such as with perceived inadequacy. According to this theory, the physical or mental pain from masochism brings attention away from the self, which would be desirable in times of "guilt, anxiety, or insecurity", or at other times when self-awareness is unpleasant.