When you picture vandals causing trouble, you probably imagine masked adults sneaking around at night, breaking things or spray-painting walls. But in Los Angeles, California, incidents like that are not limited to adults at all. A recent situation at a 7-Eleven showed just how chaotic things can get when a large group of teens decides to act out. A passerby recorded the entire event, capturing a swarm of teenagers on bikes riding straight toward a 7-Eleven near the heart of Los Angeles. They were not there to buy snacks or drinks. Instead, they rode in like a noisy wave of energy and immediately began causing chaos. The video shows several of them rushing inside the convenience store, grabbing items off the shelves, and running back out without paying a single cent.
From there, things became even more disorderly. The teens started tossing bags of chips and other snacks into the air, almost like they were throwing candy at a parade. Their friends shouted, laughed, and tried to catch the flying snacks, turning the entrance of the 7-Eleven into a chaotic spectacle. The background was filled with yelling, laughter, and the clatter of bike chains. At one point, car horns blared from frustrated drivers passing by, perhaps hoping to scare the teens off or at least get them to stop blocking the sidewalk.
The person filming tried shouting at the teens as well, telling them to stop. At one point, the camera captured a masked teenager grabbing handfuls of chips directly from inside the store and hurling them outward like confetti. When the cameraman confronted one of the teens about why they were doing this, the kid simply said they did not care because they were wearing masks and believed police would not be able to identify them.
By the end of the video, the cameraman approached one of the store employees, who looked exhausted and overwhelmed. The filmer apologized to him, though it was not clear why. They were not part of the group and were not responsible. Still, it seemed like pure secondhand embarrassment and sympathy for the workers who now had to clean up the mess.
Online, people reacted with shock and frustration. Many could not understand why a group of teens would trash a store in broad daylight for fun. “That is pack mentality,” one user commented.
Others speculated about why the filmer apologized. One person wrote, “It sounds like she was part of a group ride and felt responsible because other riders acted out. Maybe she hosted it, or maybe she just felt bad for the employee.”
Another user questioned how the teens were being raised. “Kids in other places do not act like this because they have boundaries,” they wrote. “These kids seem feral. That usually means the parents did not put guardrails in place, maybe they could not, or maybe they simply did not try.”







