A Portsmouth mother with a long track record of sports-related blowups is once again calling 911 — this time claiming her child’s basketball coach is “harassing” her and trying to injure her kids.
She told officers her daughter was recently hurt at practice and insisted her son “is next,” alleging the coach and his “posse” are attempting to injure “all of the white kids.”
When officers tried to pin down exactly what happened, the conversation bounced in every direction, with no clear complaint except her belief that the coach was driving past her house — even though he lives just a block up the same street.
Police notified the school resource officer, who said he was already aware of the claim and noted that text messages existed contradicting the injury story. Officers advised her to seek a protection order.
But if this story sounds familiar, that’s because it is.
THE SAME MOM, A WHOLE SUMMER OF DRAMA
This isn’t her first cameo in the Portsmouth youth sports soap opera.
Let’s rewind to July — when the city watched an entire softball feud explode into:
🚗 Spit, Circling Cars & Cheer Camp Chaos
Just weeks ago, she was accused of circling a car in the school parking lot, spitting on it, screaming at the occupants (a mom and her daughter leaving cheer camp), and following them out of the lot.
She had already been formally trespassed from all Portsmouth High School property at the time.
FLASHBACK TO JULY’S SOFTBALL SHENANIGANS
The same mom was involved in:
⚠️ Thursday Night:
• Drive-by yelling
• Harassing texts
• Showing up in other families’ driveways
🍟 Friday 12:30 AM — Fast & Furious: Snack Attack Edition:
• A near-midnight confrontation involving tossed food
🗣️ Friday 4:30 PM — Meltdown at the Mound:
• Public screaming at someone who had a protection order against her
• Police serving that protection order right there in the stadium
🚨 Monday Morning:
• Accusations flying
• Stalking claims
• Courthouse drama
• And still… no sign of peace
TIME FOR A TEAM HUDDLE, PORTSMOUTH
Youth sports are supposed to be about the kids — not adult feuds that escalate into:
• Spit-covered cars
• Parking lot arguments
• Protection orders
• 911 calls
• And coaches being accused of conspiracies
Parents: If your emotions start looking like a sideline brawl… it might be time to take yourself out of the game for a few plays.












































































