This is the moment a woman tried to rope off a public beach outside her stunning California home while hurling abuse at a shocked family.
Astonished onlookers shared a clip of the woman’s tantrum at tourists outside her $6million property on TikTok last week.
The woman screams at them to ‘get outta here! now!’ while they back away as she unrolls white string to separate her property from Laguna Beach, near LA.
They brand her ‘Karen of the week’ as they retreat away from the ritzy oceanside home.
Under California law, the state owns the beach waterward of the mean high tide line, meaning the public can use all areas between this point and the sea.
The moment a bellowing Karen tried to rope off areas of a public beach outside her stunning California home while hurling abuse at a shocked family has been caught on camera
Astonished onlookers shared a clip of the middle-aged woman’s tantrum leveled at tourists outside her $6 million property on TikTok last week. (Pictured: the location from above)
The video starts with the homeowner shouting ‘there goes the fence!’ as she bundles out of her home equipped with a spool of white string.
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She throws the spool toward the sand, shouting at the tourists to leave. ‘I can say whatever I want to, so get f***ing moving,’ she screams.
‘I’m not joking around. It’s not harassment on the beach, it’s harassment in my home property.’
‘This is not an Instagram moment-place,’ she adds while sectioning off her part of the beach.
‘You’re in my property, get moving now. Now you’re in my property line. Move it.’
‘Ma’am, we’re f***ing walking,’ one woman can be heard retorting, as the homeowner replies: ‘Pretty f***ing slow’
The rhetoric escalates as the tourist hits back, saying: ‘Jesus christ… shut the f*** up!’ before branding her ‘Karen of the week.’
The woman screams at a family to ‘get outta here! NOW!’ while they slowly back away while filming as she unrolls a spool of white string to separate her property from the public stretch of Laguna Beach, around 50 miles south of Los Angeles
Under California law, the state owns the beach waterward of the mean high tide line, meaning the public can use all areas between this point and the sea