A fresh clip circulating across the Internet lacks the usual drama seen in viral moments. Instead of shouting or conflict, there’s just a long conversation between a police officer and a group of teenagers in North Carolina. Eventually, officers inform them they must leave the property despite the group’s insistence that they had only recently arrived.
The video was shared on X by @uranus_is_green and shows officers and staff from King Security confronting a group of teens at North Hills, a shopping and dining complex in Raleigh.
In the video, an officer tells the group that even though they say they just arrived, they are no longer allowed to stay. She explains that “King Security doesn’t want you on the property,” adding that they oversee the entire area. She says the situation will be handled by contacting their parents, gathering their information, and issuing trespass notices before asking them to leave.
A member of the group responds, “We all just got here,” explaining that they had spoken to security downstairs, met their younger cousins, and then sat down without causing any trouble.
The officer insists that security personnel reported seeing them fighting, saying, “These officers… say they saw you guys fighting,” and adds that when people “cause a disturbance, they don’t want you guys back on the property.”
As the exchange continues, someone in the group says, “We want to leave.” The officer acknowledges this but explains that if some of them are minors, they cannot remain there alone. She says either their parents need to pick them up or the older individuals with them must take them off the property.
It is not clear what happened before the camera started recording. Neither King Security nor the Raleigh Police Department had publicly commented on the specific claims shown in the viral clip at the time of writing, and the video begins mid-conversation, after the trespass process was already underway.
Internet Reacts to the North Carolina Mall Trespass Video
Reactions to the clip were split. One commenter argued, “A private business has the right to deny entrance anyone for any reason. Just because you didn’t video yourself causing trouble doesn’t mean you didn’t.” Another made a similar point: “And now let’s see the video before this happened. Ahh right. There is no video because they don’t want to show us what actually happened.”
A third pushed back on the idea that race was the issue at all: “Sooo we gone skip over the fact the security guards are black as well or what? Yall gone keep playing the race card? The security clearly called the cops… Were they fighting or not? Yall can’t b serious in these comments.”
Others took the opposite view. One wrote, “The legal system is still intact. Sue these businesses and police departments. Losing money is the only thing they understand.” Another argued, “Racism 101. But these people need to learn their rights. They have to be given an opportunity to leave before being criminally trespassed. They weren’t asked to leave. This is a violation of their 4th amendment rights.”
The video sparked a broader debate about trespassing policies, mall security, and how businesses handle complaints involving teenagers. Because the footage begins after the confrontation was already underway, many viewers said they were left wanting more context before deciding who was in the right.







