South Australian beachgoer records couple having sex on Henley Beach in broad daylight

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An exhibitionist couple slavishly apologizes after being caught having sex on a crowded beach in broad daylight, but police warn that the man who filmed the passionate encounter might be the one in trouble.

  • A couple was caught having sex at Henley Beach in SA
  • The man apologized for the public display of affection
  • Experts say the man who filmed them could be in trouble

A couple has apologized after they were filmed having sex on a beach in broad daylight, but police say the man who filmed the couple could be the one in trouble.

The couple’s public display of affection occurred in front of other beachgoers, including several children, at Henley Beach in South Australia on Monday afternoon.

A man who saw the couple recorded the intimate act on his phone.

“Hey, check this out,” he says to another person while filming the couple.

He’s doing the anaconda!

They capture a couple having sex in broad daylight at Henley Beach, in South Australia

The man then confronts the couple and accuses them of ‘public indecency in front of children’.

He tells the man who was filmed: ‘Say sorry. Say you’re sorry.’

“Yeah, sorry,” the man replies.

In another moment of the commotion, the man who recorded the couple returns to demand another apology.

“No, I want you to say you’re sorry,” he says.

“Yeah, I’m 100% sorry for doing that in front of the kids,” the man replies.

The images of the intimate act were uploaded to Facebook and viewed thousands of times.

He was removed from the social media platform on Monday night.

South Australian Police are aware of the incident but are not pressing charges at this time.

The man involved in the intimate act is seen apologizing on camera for

The man involved in the intimate act is seen apologizing on camera for “doing that in front of the kids.”

They allege that the man who filmed the couple could be violating privacy laws.

This was backed up by some legal experts who say he could be in trouble.

“It’s not a slap on the wrist, but some of these offenses have the potential to attract incarceration and while unlikely, it certainly is a sentencing option available to the court,” Woods and Co attorney Hugh told 7News. Woods.

In South Australia, it is an offense to engage in humiliating or degrading filming or to take and share a sexual or intimate image of someone without their consent.