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William Kennedy

Nashville OnlyFans cop learns his fate for explicit traffic stop skit

Former Metro Nashville Police officer Sean Herman, 35, pleaded no contest on August 14, 2025, to a felony official misconduct charge for his role in an explicit mock traffic-stop skit.

He was sentenced to one year of supervised probation and granted judicial diversion. This allows for one felony charge to be dismissed and his record expunged upon successful completion of his probation.

The Tennessee Peace Officer Standards and Training Commission indefinitely suspended his law enforcement certification in August 2024, with its future status contingent upon a decision by the commission after the legal proceedings conclude.

What did Sean Herman do?

Back in April 2024, Herman — then a patrol officer — participated in a sexually explicit parody video filmed in a warehouse parking lot while in full uniform.

The skit featured OnlyFans content creator Jordin, where, during a staged traffic stop, she exposed herself and invited Herman to touch her; she likewise touched him.

Although Herman’s face wasn’t visible, a police patch on his uniform identified him as a Metro Nashville officer. The video went viral, attracting millions of views and drawing attention from local media and law enforcement.

As a result, Herman was terminated from the Metro Nashville Police Department in May 2024 and later arrested in June, released on a $3,000 bond, and indicted on two counts of official misconduct.

Jordin’s perspective

Meanwhile, Jordin maintained that the video was intended purely as a promotional clip for X, not for her OnlyFans page, and was shot on private property before Herman’s shift began. She claimed initial contact with Herman stemmed from a Reddit post, and they filmed the skit as a mock traffic-stop promo.

Following the public backlash and media attention, Jordin removed the video. She said her OnlyFans subscriber numbers jumped significantly after the story went viral. Although she tried to distance herself from the incident, she described Herman as “a very respectful guy, very polite.

What happens now

Because of judicial diversion, if Herman completes his one-year probation successfully, the case could be dismissed and he may even petition to have the charge expunged from his record. His certification to serve as a law enforcement officer in Tennessee, currently suspended, might also be reinstated once legal proceedings conclude.

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