A parking dispute out of North Carolina is going viral after a woman stood in front of another driver’s car to prevent them from leaving. On top of that, she had the audacity to threaten to call the police. The clip, shared on X, captures what appears to be a tense standoff in a parking lot, with the driver repeatedly telling the woman in a white zip-up jacket and striped shorts that her actions are not only unreasonable but illegal.
What seemed to start as a disagreement over the recorder’s vehicle supposedly being blocked in by the black SUV soon evolved into a crash course on the limits of civilian parking enforcement.
According to the video, the person attempting to back out of a parking space found their vehicle blocked in by another car. Once the individual attempts to leave their space, the woman in the white jacket allegedly places herself directly in front of the car in an attempt to block it from moving.
As the driver pans the camera around, you can hear them say, “Ma’am, you understand you are not allowed to block people in. You understand you cannot block people in while I’m trying to leave.”
When the driver asked her to move, the woman responded by threatening to call the police. To that, the driver responds, “That’s fine, but you know you cannot legally – you’re literally kidnapping me at this point.”
She then plainly states, “No, I am not.”
To that, the driver responds, “You are standing in front of my car.”
Instead of moving or resolving the situation, she seemed to double down on her stance and, when prompted about her video going viral, states, “Luckily, I’ve done this enough times before to know.”
While it may sound legally ambitious to use the word kidnapping to describe this scenario, it isn’t entirely without basis. Under North Carolina common law, false imprisonment is defined as the unlawful restraint of a person against their will, and confinement can be as simple as trapping someone in a room, against a doorway, or a vehicle.
Nationally, legal sources indicate that one individual blocking another individual’s car so they cannot exit a parking lot is cited as a textbook example of potential false imprisonment. And in North Carolina, it is specifically cited as a Class 1 misdemeanor that often comes with the charge of kidnapping, which could carry a much harsher sentence.
Internet Reacts to North Carolina Karen Blocking Driver’s Car
The clip sparked debate online, with some sympathizing with the driver’s frustration while others questioned the framing of the confrontation.
“If these Karens could only confine their toxic femininity to parking lots, society wouldn’t be crumbling before our eyes,” one commenter wrote on X. Another asked, “Do they wake up in the morning planning how to make everyone they encounter miserable?”
Others took a more wry angle. “Why can’t I ever get a Karen in my life? I need a pick me up,” one user quipped. A more direct response simply read: “Just drive. If they are smart, they will move.”
Parking lot standoffs are not a new type of viral video. However, this incident from North Carolina struck a chord differently due to the woman’s claim to have “done this enough times before,” which suggested a pattern of behavior rather than just a moment of frustration.
Many also found fault in threatening to call the police on someone while actively committing the offense herself. The tension and deadpan demeanor of both the driver and the woman brought to the scenario ultimately gave the video its staying power.







