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Woman Banned From 20 Percent Of USA For Painting 'Woke' Graffiti Around National Parks

Woman Banned From 20 Percent Of USA For Painting 'Woke' Graffiti Around National Parks

Step aside Banksy.

James Dawson

James Dawson

An American woman has been banned from national parks and federally administered land - which makes up over a fifth of the land in the USA - after painting graffiti on rock formations.

Casey Nocket, 23, posted evidence of her crimes to Instagram yet still reckoned she'd be able to get away with it, the Daily Mail reported.

Obviously she got caught and, alongside the ban, was sentenced to 200 hours of community service. She will also pay a fine that will be determined at a hearing in December.

Here's one of her pieces of 'art'...

man bun1
man bun1

Image Credit: Modern Hiker

Wow, a bloke with a man-bun smoking weed. Fuck the system!

The San Diego woman documented her art on rock features using social media as she travelled across the USA.

Over a 26-day period in 2014 she damaged formations at seven national parks using acrylic paint and markers, signing the 'art' with her social media tag 'Creepytings'.

The vandalism was difficult to remove because the sandblasting and chemical stripping techniques used to remove paint can cause irreplaceable damage to natural features.

TheLADbible is unable to confirm whether this is the wokest art every painted, but it's certainly pretty damn close. (Image Credit: Modern Hiker)

The graffiti is still to be removed at two parks, Crater Lake and Death Valley, despite the vandalism being done nearly two years later.

Prosecutor Phillip Talbert said in a statement: "The defendant's defacement of multiple rock formations showed a lack of respect for the law and our shared national treasures.

"The National Park Service has worked hard to restore the rock formations to their natural state, completing clean-up efforts in five of the seven parks."

Her Instagram account has since been deleted, but at the time she posted saying: "It's art, not vandalism. I am an artist."

She might think so, but the judge certainly didn't.

Words by James Dawson

Featured Image Credit: