A fired Tennessee police officer Maegan Hall who was involved in a departmental sex scandal claims that her superiors “sexually groomed” her.

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Maegan Hall

A fired Tennessee police officer Maegan Hall who was accused of participating in a sex scandal within her agency has now launched a lawsuit against the 60 members of the force. In her “hostile workplace,” the former cop claims that she was “sexually groomed.”

Maegan Hall, a former La Vergne Police officer who was sworn into the Tennessee force on August 19, 2021, was discharged in January 2023 when it was discovered during an inquiry that she had attended “Girls Gone Wild”-style gatherings with at least five male officers.

These get-togethers allegedly involved heavy drinking and having sex both on and off the clock.

They allegedly once took place on a houseboat with a hot tub and other times on city property.

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Also, investigators discovered that Hall and others were the subjects of shared nude images. The investigation resulted in the immediate termination of five policemen and the suspension of three others without pay.

Hall, former Sergeants Lewis Powell and Henry “Ty” McGowan, Detective Seneca Shields, and Officer Juan Lugo-Perez were among those let go. Officers Larry Holloday, Patrick Magliocco, and Gavin Schoeberl were suspended.

Hall, the female cop at the center of the scandal, has revealed to investigators since the scandal’s termination that she did engage in sexual activity with four officers, including two of her superiors.

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Hall claims that she was the victim of “sexual grooming” at work in a brand-new federal lawsuit she filed on Monday (February 27) in a U.S. District Court in Nashville.

Hall names La Vergne, former Sgts. Lewis Powell and Henry “Ty” McGowan, as well as former Police Chief Burrel “Chip” Davis in her lawsuit.

According to reports,

Davis was let go in the first few days of February after it came to light that he was aware of the events but did nothing to punish the participating cops.

According to Hall’s lawsuit, each defendant “deprived her of due process.” The defendants “violated federal law against distributing intimate photos online and across state lines,” according to Hall’s lawsuit.