Moment bellowing Karen tries to rope off areas of public BEACH outside her stunning California home while hurling abuse at shocked family
This is the moment a woman tries to cordon off a public beach in front of her beautiful California home with barrier tape, while hurling insults at her shocked family.
Stunned bystanders shared a clip of the woman’s rampage on tourists outside her $6 million estate on TikTok last week.
The woman yells at them to “get away! Right now!” as they back away as the woman unrolls a white rope to cordon off her property from Laguna Beach, near LA.
They call her ‘Karen of the Week’ as they retreat from their posh seaside home.
Under California law, the state owns the beach at the water’s edge of the mean high tide line, meaning the public may use all areas between this point and the sea.
The moment a screaming Karen tried to cordon off parts of a public beach in front of her beautiful California home with barrier tape, while hurling insults at a shocked family, was caught on camera
Stunned onlookers shared a clip of the middle-aged woman’s tantrum on tourists outside her $6 million estate on TikTok last week. (Pictured: Location from above)
The video begins with the homeowner shouting, “There goes the fence!” as she walks out of her house carrying a roll of white rope.
She throws the reel towards the sand and yells at the tourists to leave. ‘I can say whatever I want, so come on, damn it,’ she yells.
“I’m not joking. It’s not harassment on the beach, it’s harassment on my own turf.”
“This is not a place for an Instagram moment,” she adds as she marks out her section of beach.
“You’re on my property, get out now. Now you’re on my property line. Get out.”
“Ma’am, we’re fucking walking,” a woman can be heard saying, while the homeowner replies, “Pretty fucking slow.”
The rhetoric escalates when the tourist hits back, saying, “Jesus Christ… shut your f***ing mouth!” before calling her “Karen of the week.”
The woman yells at a family to “get out of here! NOW!” as they slowly back away while she films herself unrolling a coil of white rope to separate her property from the public area of Laguna Beach, about 50 miles (80 kilometers) south of Los Angeles.
Under California law, the state owns the beach at the water’s edge of the mean high tide line, meaning the public can use all areas between this point and the sea