A South Carolina gubernatorial candidate recently came under fire after officials said she unleashed a barrage of profanity on Transportation Security Administration (TSA) agents, leaving airport employees "visibly upset."

U.S. Rep. Nancy Mace, who represents the state's first congressional district covering parts of Charleston, turned a “minor miscommunication” by police into a “spectacle," according to a conclusion documented by TSA officials in a 10-page report from the Charleston International Police Department.

Mace, 48, became the first Republican woman elected to Congress from South Carolina in 2021. She criticized President Donald Trump over the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack before becoming one of his closest allies.

Mace, who is 48, launched a campaign for the state's gubernatorial race on Aug. 4.

The 10-page finding, first reported by The Washington Post, is addressed to Charleston Regional Aviation Authority President Elliott Summey from airport police Chief James A. Woods, and yielded sworn statements from multiple TSA agents who witnessed the events.

The event took place on Oct. 30 during this year's federal government shutdown. According to the document, Mace claimed it was one of "repeated security breaches" allegedly threatening her safety at the Charleston International Airport.

The report did not detail the profanity allegedly used.

Mace's office: 'Issues that actually matter'

Mace's office released the following statement to USA TODAY on Tuesday, Dec. 10:

"We appreciate this full exoneration and look forward to remaining fully focused on the issues that actually matter to South Carolinians: affordability and law and order."

'Continued failure to follow established procedures'

One witness reported Mace swore at a police officer and complained about the wait time, while two other witnesses reported she used profane language and shouting, according to the report. The witnesses said they did not know whether she was yelling at an airport employee or someone on the phone.

"While it is clear that we hold a certain level of responsibility in miscommunicating the color of Congresswoman Mace’s vehicle, it’s also equally clear that her continued failure to follow established procedures at the checkpoint is what turned a minor miscommunication over the color of a vehicle into the spectacle that this issue has become for our employees and airport workers," the report reads.

Natalie Neysa Alund is a senior reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at nalund@usatoday.com and follow her on X @nataliealund.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Police investigate Rep. Nancy Mace 'spectacle' at Charleston airport

Reporting by Natalie Neysa Alund, USA TODAY / USA TODAY

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