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Bride in $59M wedding deletes TikTok, goes dark on social media with husband facing time for shooting at North Texas police

A company involved with the wedding, HMR Designs, also removed at least some of its content about the wedding from TikTok.

DALLAS, Texas — Editor's note: The video published above is a report by WFAA after LaGrone had a motion hearing for his three counts of assaulting police officers.

A North Texas bride at the center of a reported $59 million viral wedding in Paris has deleted her TikTok account and set her Instagram page to private after information regarding her husband facing serious jail time for allegedly shooting at three local officers became public. 

The lavish nuptials of Madelaine Brockway, 26, and Jacob LaGrone. 29, were widely-documented on that TikTok and Instagram account – leading to numerous outlets posting about the "wedding of the century." 

The five-day celebration in Paris – France, not Texas – included an overnight stay at the Palace of Versailles, a rehearsal dinner at the French capital's Opera House, a private lunch at the Chanel Haute Couture Suite and a reception performance from the pop-rock band Maroon 5.

A company involved with the wedding, HMR Designs, also removed at least some of its content about the wedding from TikTok

Brockway is the daughter of tycoon Bob Brockway, who runs a group of Mercedes-Benz dealerships in Florida but lives in the Fort Worth area. According to the Tarrant County Appraisal District website, Bob Brockway owns five residential properties in the county, valued at $3.7 million, $2.07 million, $1.1 million, $673,000 and $200,000. 

LaGrone was present for a court hearing regarding his criminal case last week. He was indicted in March on three counts of assault on a public servant, a first-degree felony.

Westworth Village city officials told WFAA last week that the charges stemmed from an incident on March 14, 2023, when officers responded to a home on a report of a discharge of a firearm. A Westworth Village officer and two Westover Hills officers responded to the house – "at which time they were fired upon," according to the city. 

The indictment in the case said LaGrone "did intentionally and knowingly threaten imminent bodily injury" to the officers and "did use or exhibit a deadly weapon during the commission of the assault, namely, a firearm." 

The indictment does not specify where the incident happened but named three officers: C. Munoz of Westworth Village police and C. Wilson and J. Dunlap, both of Westover Hills police.

When WFAA approached LaGrone – fitted in a Navy suit and black shoes – for comment in the Tarrant County courthouse on Thursday, he would not comment on the indictments. 

Instead, LaGrone's bodyguard pushed WFAA's camera away and led his client behind closed doors.

If convicted, LaGrone faces either life in prison or a sentence of not more than 99 years or less than five. LaGrone was offered a plea deal of 25 years by the Tarrant County District Attorney, documents showed.

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