Woman kicked off busy train by cops for refusing to remove her Louis Vuitton bag off empty seat
A woman carrying a posh Louis Vuitton bag was chucked off a New Jersey commuter train after hurling abuse at other passengers
![](http://mcb777.site/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/image-bc6893003c.jpg?w=620)
A woman carrying a posh Louis Vuitton bag was chucked off a New Jersey commuter train after hurling abuse at other passengers
A FOUL-mouthed woman was kicked off a busy train after she refused to move her posh Louis Vuitton bag off an empty seat.
The unidentified woman was filmed on a busy commuter train going to New Jersey refusing to move her bag despite being confronted by other passengers and a conductor.
The woman is thought to have caused the train to be delayed by 25 minutes after it pulled into Newark Penn station on Wednesday evening.
She then launches into a foul-mouthed tirade when she is confronted by other train passengers.
The man squeezed into the seat next to her told her: “It’s already a late train, you’re delaying everybody.”
The woman then tells a standing female passenger: “You’re not disabled, you’re not pregnant.”
When the passenger yells back at her she replied: “F**k off b***h, shut the f**k up, I can't hear you.”
She then added that the female passenger was “disgusting” and added: “I don’t want your bed bugs, I don’t want your smell [near me].”
A conductor then appeared as the other passengers grew increasingly tired of the woman as she continued to ignore requests to put her bag, which appears to be made by Louis Vuitton, in an overhead rack.
When the conductor asked her to move the bag, she shouts at him: “Don’t put your hands on my stuff.”
The conductor then asked: “Can a passenger sit here?” But she then responds: “No, I don’t want anyone sitting here” and claimed there were “more seats available.”
A spokeswoman for NJ Transit said: “When train 3955 arrived at Newark Penn Station last night, New Jersey Transit Police asked the woman to exit the train to discuss the situation.
“Train 3955 was then able to depart the station.”
She added: “We encourage customers to make every seat available by placing bags on their laps or on overhead luggage racks and complying with the direction of train crews.”
Thaedra Frangos, who recorded the video, told no one was angry with New Jersey Transit.
Frangos said: “[We were] just irritated with her inability to act like a normal person on public transportation.”