Location: Monroe, LA
A Monroe woman is speaking out after an encounter at the Walmart Supercenter on Louisville Avenue on December 9, 2025, that ended in her arrest. A nearly 10-minute video recorded during the incident is now circulating publicly and has sparked community discussion about trespass procedures, police communication, and how situations like this escalate.
According to the shopper, she entered Walmart around 1:37 p.m. to look for Christmas presents for her son. She states that she purchased a candy bar and was not approached by any Walmart employee while inside the store regarding theft or store policy violations.
In the video, the interaction begins as the shopper exits the store and is approached by a police officer who asks for her identification and informs her that she is being banned from the store. The shopper repeatedly asks why she is being banned and whether she is being detained. In the video, the officer does not clearly answer whether she is free to leave or being legally detained.
The officer tells the shopper that she must sign a piece of paper in order to be legally trespassed from Walmart. She repeatedly asks whether signing the document is required. At different points in the video, the officer gives conflicting answers — first stating that she must sign it, and later stating that she does not have to.
The shopper attempts to leave the area and is followed outside. She states that she was then physically grabbed and forced back into the store and into the asset protection office. She was subsequently arrested and charged with disturbing the peace, resisting arrest, and failure to identify.
In the video, the shopper tells the officer multiple times that she does not have a physical ID but does verbally provide her name. There are also comments made during the encounter suggesting the officer may have looked inside her purse, though the video does not clearly establish whether consent was given or whether a search warrant was present.
The video also includes statements indicating that the reason for the trespass may have been related to the shopper using a store outlet to charge her phone, not an allegation of theft. Walmart, like all private businesses, has the legal right to trespass individuals from their property. However, the video raises questions about how that process is communicated and enforced, particularly when instructions appear inconsistent.
The shopper also states in the video that she is autistic and that public spaces like stores are sometimes used as a safe place for her. She references a prior interaction with law enforcement in which officers assisted her in reaching a local shelter rather than trespassing or arresting her, which she contrasts with this encounter.
This story is not about determining guilt or innocence, nor does it make legal conclusions about whether any rights were violated. However, the video does raise concerns about clarity, communication, and escalation. Viewers may reasonably question whether clearer explanations — such as whether the shopper was legally detained, whether signing the trespass notice was required, and what consequences would follow refusal — could have prevented the situation from ending in an arrest.
At minimum, the incident highlights the importance of clear procedures and consistent communication when law enforcement and private businesses work together, especially when interacting with individuals who may be vulnerable or confused by conflicting instructions.
The full video is being shared for context so viewers can observe the interaction themselves and form their own opinions.
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