JACKSON, NJ – Explosive allegations of a romantic relationship between Jackson Township’s mayor and a police union leader have landed the municipality in federal court, after a resident claimed she was silenced and forcibly removed from public meetings for exposing the affair and questioning conflicts of interest among township officials.
The lawsuit, filed in federal court by resident Elenor Hannum, accuses Jackson Township, its then Council President (now mayor) Jennifer Kuhn, and Township Attorney Gregory McGuckin of violating her constitutional right to free speech.
The case, Hannum v. Jackson Township, now before U.S. District Judge Zahid N. Quraishi, stems from a series of fiery council meetings in 2024 and 2025 where Hannum attempted to raise questions about ethics, favoritism, and alleged personal entanglements between elected officials and members of law enforcement.
Last week, McGuckin petitioned to remove himself from the case and his request was granted, however the township failed to have the suit dismissed in its entirety.
It will proceed in federal court.
According to the lawsuit, allegedly, during a February 2024 township council meeting, Hannum spoke out against an ordinance creating a new Director of Public Safety position — a move she claimed was politically motivated to undermine then–Police Chief Matthew Kunz.
Kunz has since retired and settled a $2 million settlement with the township.
Hannum claimed that then Council President Kuhn was romantically involved with a police sergeant who is named in the lawsuit, but will not be named here. At the time, the officer served as the president of the local Police Benevolent Association, which had publicly pushed for the ordinance’s passage.
At the time, Jackson Mayor Kuhn denied the romantic allegations made by Hannum when asked by Shore News Network.
When Hannum raised the issue, Kuhn allegedly turned to McGuckin for guidance. He reportedly advised her that she could declare Hannum “out of order.” Moments later, Hannum says, Kuhn ordered her removal from the meeting.
Unequal treatment at public hearings
Court documents describe a striking contrast in how the council handled other speakers.
The next speaker after Hannum was that police officer named in the suit, who spoke immediately after Hannum. According to the lawsuit, he was allowed to go over his time limit and use his remarks to attack “residents who spewed lies on social pages” — comments unrelated to the ordinance under discussion.
He was not interrupted or warned.
Hannum’s complaint alleges that the selective enforcement of speech rules violated her First Amendment rights by silencing dissent critical of township leadership. She further contends that township officials retaliated against her at subsequent meetings in 2025 by raising similar concerns about conflicts of interest involving another councilman.
Judge allows part of case to move forward
In a mixed ruling, Judge Quraishi granted in part and denied in part a motion to dismiss filed by McGuckin. While some claims were dismissed, key allegations tied to potential viewpoint discrimination and free speech violations were allowed to proceed — keeping the federal civil rights case alive and ensuring that Jackson Township officials remain under legal scrutiny.
- Resident claims she was silenced for exposing alleged romantic conflict
- Court allows portions of federal civil rights lawsuit to proceed
- Township attorney and council president named as defendants
The case now moves toward discovery, where Hannum’s attorneys are expected to seek records and testimony shedding light on whether personal and romantic relationships inside Jackson’s political and police circles influenced municipal decision-making.