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‘It is never acceptable to berate police officers’: Tim Scott hits back at Nancy Mace over airport security incident

Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) chided Rep. Nancy Mace’s (R-S.C.) on Tuesday for her confrontation with airport security, after the House member claimed she was treated unfairly by agents at the Charleston International Airport.

In a Tuesday evening Facebook post, Scott said Mace had invoked his name “for reasons that are unclear” and that his experiences at the airport had been positive “without exception.” He also thanked airport police for taking extra security precautions due to death threats lobbed against him.

“It is never acceptable to berate police officers, airport staff, and TSA agents who are simply doing their jobs, nor is it becoming of a Member of Congress to use such vulgar language when dealing with constituents,” Scott wrote.

The statement comes after an altercation last week, in which Mace “began loudly cursing and making derogatory comments” toward airport security, according to an incident report filed by a police officer. The confrontation apparently occurred when Mace attempted to use a restricted entrance following a mix-up about the vehicle she arrived in.

According to the report, Mace — who is running for governor in South Carolina — also said the security “would never treat Tim Scott like this” and berated TSA agents.

Mace has repeatedly criticized the security officials involved and defended her actions since Wired first reported the incident, accusing an American Airlines gate agent and several officers of conspiring to lie on the report and vowing legal action against them.

“All federally elected officials including Senators Scott and Graham use the same Crew Member Access Point at airports,” she wrote in one post. “That’s the federal security protocol. Maybe check your facts next time.”

Mace has posted on social media about the incident more than a dozen times, calling on Charleston International Airport CEO Elliott Summey and others to resign.

Scott also wrote that he does not use profanity “in public or private” and that members of Congress work for law enforcement, not vice versa.

“For those who want to invoke my name, please have the courtesy to note my actions and how I treat police officers, TSA agents, and fellow travelers with the respect they deserve,” Scott wrote in the post.

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