
Nancy Mace went on to describe her entire experience of being the victim of what she described as sex crimes and non-consensual filming. Then, behind her, she displayed a poster with a black-and-white snapshot that had been purposefully blurred for obvious reasons. She disclosed that the screenshot was taken from a covert video that had been filmed in her private residence. Additionally, a yellow circle was used in the screenshot to highlight her form. "Freedom is the right to sleep without having your nude body filmed by someone's camera; it is not a theory." "I speak not just as a lawmaker, but as a survivor," stated South Carolina lawmaker Nancy Mace.
Before the committee's hearing began in the house, Mace made her case on social media site X. She wrote, 'Today I will show my naked body on one of the videos predator and rapist Patrick Bryant took of me and many other women. Without our knowledge. Without our permission. And without our consent.'
The lawmaker detailed what she would tell the Congressmen in a lengthy and intricate X post. "Predators harvest a woman's privacy; real men protect it," she added. I will expose predator and rapist Patrick Bryant for the monster he is in my oversight hearing today. with proof. naked bodies. Legs apart. pictures of upskirts. He would videotape and take pictures of ladies without their knowledge, consent, or permission. For years, he kept these pictures. The victims were also unaware.
She displayed more images during the court, such as the purported position of a covert camera, a photo of her ex with several others, and blurry pictures of the ladies she said were Patrick's victims.
Bryant rejected all of Nancy Mace's accusations that he had committed major sexual offenses, including rape and abuse.
The Take It Down Act, a historic measure signed into law by US President Donald Trump, forbids the sharing of explicit, nonconsensual photographs online, whether they are created by AI or by humans.