TIKTOK Influencer Faces Charges And Prison Time For Viral Bathroom Postings
It wasn't enough to use the ladies' bathroom, this 'influencer' had to film it

The left keeps telling us that certain people just want to live their lives in peace. The boundary-pushing and attention-seeking of the activist left cast doubt on that claim.
A guy by the name of Nicholas Sylvan Contino has an online (female) persona, Lilly Tino. That TikToker went viral when he took a tour of the various women’s toilets in Disney and proceed to rate them.
It may have seemed like a clever in-your-face way to ‘own’ the traditionalists and the GOP. But it is about to bite him in the ass, in a big way.
He should have gotten some competent legal counsel before pulling that stunt, because it could net him a big fine and some hard time.
The Attorney General’s office of the state of Florida opened a formal investigation against recordings from Tino’s bathroom on June 24, 2025, on the premise of Florida Statute 810.145, a statute against illegal recordings of private places like bathrooms or dressing rooms.
If convicted, Tino faces up to five years in prison and a $5,000 fine.
“RECORDING SOMEONE IN A PLACE WHERE THEY REASONABLY EXPECT PRIVACY IS NOT ONLY WRONG, IT’S CRIMINAL,”
an AG spokesperson told Inside the Magic. — HypeFresh
For anyone inclined to give this guy the benefit of the doubt, don’t bother. He’s chonically offended, posting grievances online, and he goes out of his way to be noticed as he violates womens’ spaces.
Why else would he announce that he went into the stall in an occupied bathroom so that he could to urinate while standing? Sitting down would be far more discreet, but the problem with being discreet is that discretion would not announce his transgressive act for what it really was — attention seeking.
>be troon
>go to family theme park
>don’t post attractions
>only post women’s bathrooms
>pee while standing up around girls (bc lol)He doesn’t care if he draws attention or causes unease. There is no fear here. Only hunger for power and perceived oppression. pic.twitter.com/atmKDK05U4
— Chud Dudley, Golden Age Misfit (@TrvthfvlTreason) June 4, 2025
Notice the faces of people who had no idea they were being filmed.
Which brings us right back to the attention-seeking question we originally began with, one of the most obvious examples of the tension between the claim and the reality is in the trans-women-are-women movement.
Have you ever noticed that there’s never really any outrage over women dressed up as men slipping into a mens room? Have you ever asked yourself why there’s no outrage?
It’s simple. Men are not concerned that some chick in a pantsuit is coming into a mensroom so they can act on some kind of a creepy fetish at our expense. We aren’t afraid of leering. We’re not afraid of being overpowered in an out-of-the-way place. And we’re not concerned about them getting off on the idea of invading our spaces.
But all that chages when we’re talking about someone who doesn’t really belong there waltzing into a ladies’ room. Women tend to be smaller. More vulnerable. And, whatever the left may say to downplay the issue, autogynephilia is a real thing. Anyone clicking the hyperlink will find the NIH site describing it as a fetish that associates arousal with being seen as a female.
There’s a creepy trend of males filming themselves inside women’s bathrooms to show off and affirm their trans identities.
It’s almost like it’s a fetish… pic.twitter.com/oKaB7gusfx
— Libs of TikTok (@libsoftiktok) August 28, 2023
It shouldn’t take much imagination to see why respectable women would NOT want that element complicating their bathroom experience.