Juan McCullum, shown in December 2003 when he was a Mississippi State student body vice president, pleaded not guilty Tuesday to charges in connection with the circulation of nude images and video of his former employer, a congressional delegate from the Virgin Islands, and her husband. (Joe Ellis/Clarion Ledger via AP)

A former staff member to the Virgin Islands elected representative to Congress pleaded not guilty Tuesday in the circulation of nude images and video of the representative and her husband.

Juan R. McCullum, 35, of Washington, was indicted by a federal grand jury in the capital on two counts of cyberstalking Del. Stacey Plaskett (D-Virgin ­Islands), for whom he worked as a legislative counsel from April 2015 until June 2016. The July 11 indictment was unsealed Thursday.

McCullum entered a plea but not did not speak at a brief arraignment before U.S. Magistrate Deborah A. Robinson of Washington, where he was represented by his court-appointed attorney, Stuart Sears.

McCullum was released on personal recognizance but on several conditions, including that he stay away from the delegate’s family and staff online and in person and not travel internationally. He was also told not to access Facebook or any applications that automatically delete communications, not to use ­anonymizing software, and to not delete electronic files dated after Jan. 1, 2016.

Federal prosecutors and the U.S. Capitol Police announced charges last week against ­McCullum and a co-worker, Dorene Browne-Louis, 45, of ­Upper Marlboro, Md., who was Plaskett’s scheduler from ­January 2015 until April 2016 and who has pleaded not guilty to obstructing justice.

Browne-Louis also has been released on her own recognizance. Both defendants are due back in court Wednesday.

[Two former staffers charged in cyberstalking of U.S. House member, husband]

Government charging documents did not name Plaskett, but stated that both defendants worked for the same nonvoting House delegate, identified by the initials S.P.

Plaskett last week confirmed that she is “S.P.,” issuing statements thanking investigators and condemning perpetrators of “an organized smear campaign and defamatory press reports concerning both me and my family.”

According to the indictment, McCullum offered in March 2016 to help take the delegate’s malfunctioning, password-protected iPhone to a local Apple store to be repaired.

McCullum was not given permission to take, copy or distribute any of the contents of the iPhone, which contained the private nude images and videos, authorities alleged.

In July 2016, after McCullum left the delegate’s staff, he allegedly created a Hotmail account and a Facebook account under a fake name to post the material and encouraged sharing it, the indictment states. The indictment also alleged that McCullum texted Browne-Louis as early as July 2, 2016, and emailed her some of the material.

Some of the personal photographs surfaced on the Internet shortly before a Democratic primary. Plaskett, 51, a lawyer and former New York City prosecutor and Justice Department official, went on to win with 85 percent of the vote, then won reelection in November to her second House term.

Plaskett last summer criticized the public unauthorized distribution of private photographs she had shared with her husband, Jonathan Buckney-Small, and the posting of a “playful video of our family,” that included one of their children.

“To say my family and I are greatly upset would be a tremendous understatement,” she said at that time, adding that the dissemination of the images was “a shockingly disgusting invasion of my family’s and my privacy — not to mention criminal acts . . . ”

Federal investigators launched an investigation within days and alleged that Browne-Louis deleted McCullum’s texts from her phone and gave false and misleading statements to them and the grand jury.

McCullum faces charges that carry a maximum of five years in prison. Browne-Louis faces charges that carry a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and has been released on personal recognizance.

McCullum is a former reality TV star who was known as “Pretty” and appeared on VH1’s “I Love New York,” according to a 2015 profile in The Hill newspaper.