A lady who owns a multimillion-dollar property on the shores of Laguna Beach in California has unleashed on a family sitting on the sand in front of her home.
The general public beach area butts up against what is seemingly her property, which the property owner had sectioned off with rope and stakes.
Within the video, which was shared on social media and has been viewed almost 400k times, the family will be seen awkwardly walking away from their spot on the sand after the lady began screaming and swearing of their direction.
“Get outta here now,” the lady screams, as she rolls out more white rope to increase her property boundary onto the sand.
“I can say whatever I would like 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.”
As she starts roping off more of the sand, the lady wearing a swimsuit and sarong shouts “you’re in my property, get moving now. Now you’re in my property line. Move it.”
The lady behind the camera who’s being forced to go away the sand replies with “Ma’am, we’re f***ing walking” as each she and a few children are being forced off the sand, while the property owner hits back with: “Pretty f***ing slow”.
The lady filming unleashes: “Jesus Christ … shut the f*** up!’ before labeling the lady as ‘Karen of the week.’
The post has received hundreds of comments, with many praising the lady behind the camera for handling the situation perfectly.

“The coastal commission goes to have a field day with this video,” one wrote.
“You might be so significantly better than me,” one other added.
“There would’ve been an entire beach rave right at that location inside 10 minutes if it was my decision.”
“The audacity!” one other added.
“I might never have moved. Cancelled all plans and invited everyone I do know.”
It is known that in California, the state owns the beach waterward of the mean high tide line for everybody to access and revel in.
The state and other public entities like counties and cities may additionally own dry sandy beaches landward of the mean high tide line for public use.
While there’s private property ownership along some beaches and bluffs, the state owns most tidelands, submerged lands, and waters in trust for the profit, use, and pleasure of the general public.