A man accused by Congresswoman Nancy Mace of sexual abuse is hitting back at her allegations as “absolutely” false. The South Carolina lawmaker accused businessman Brian Musgrave, her ex-fiancé Patrick Bryant, and two other men of raping women and girls in their communities and taking videos of the events.
Rep. Nancy Mace delivered a stunning Feb. 10 floor speech. But her actions since then are raising legal questions about whether all her actions are protected.
Congressional attorneys responded to an open letter threatening legal action against U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace after a man named during her speech on the U.S. House floor accused her of making “baseless” statements against him.
One day before Rep. Nancy R. Mace’s planned talk at Harvard’s Institute of Politics, the firebrand South Carolina Republican was still lacing into the University online and in an interview with The Crimson.
You upended Brian (Musgrave’s) life when you accused him falsely of being a rapist, a predator and a sex trafficker,” attorneys Eric Bland and Ronald Richter wrote. “He is none of those things.”
The night before Rep. Nancy R. Mace (R-S.C.) came to Harvard, she described its campus as enemy territory. But after her visit, she said her opinion of Harvard students had changed for the better, according to three people who attended her Thursday event at the Institute of Politics.