A peaceful dog walk turned into an ugly confrontation for one Miami resident after an older woman came out of nowhere and began harassing her for simply being in the neighborhood.

Aspiring model Rayne Burse, who is black, was taking her pitbull Mojito for a walk near her fiancé’s home, where she had recently moved in, when an older white woman began to follow her.

Burse, 24, initially thought she might be on the woman's property. She put a phone call she was having with her mother on hold as 63-year-old Maria Dorrbecker approached.

'My first thought was she must be telling me to come move, understandable,' Burse wrote on a Facebook post about the incident.

Aspiring model Rayne Burse, who is black, was taking her pitbull Mojito for a walk near her fiancé’s home in Miami when Maria Dorrbecker, 63, (pictured) began to follow her and harass her

'I let her get a bit closer, put my mom on hold for a second and in the most respectful way literally said "I'm sorry m'am, am I trespassing? Would you like me to leave?"'

'That's when all holy hell broke loose.'

Burse said Dorrbecker began to wag her finger at her and harass her. Burse tried to walk away, but Dorrbecker followed her. She ended the phone call with her mother and began to record the confrontation.

'Who are you following, and for what?' Burse asks Dorrbecker.

'Because you're part of South Miami,' Dorrbecker responds, not seeming to note that both women at the time were in a neighborhood located in South Miami.

'Okay I don't know what "you're part of South Miami” means,' Burse tells her. 'When I asked you if I was on your property, do you want me to leave...'

‘It’s not my property,' Dorrbecker tells her again.

‘Okay so what are you saying then? What are you out here bothering me for, did I bother you?’ Burse replies.

‘You know what, you’re in it,’ Dorrbecker tells her. ‘And I’m going to report you. Wherever you are, I am going to report.’

Burse then asks Dorrbecker what exactly it is she plans to report.

When Burse asked Dorrbecker why she was following her, Dorrbecker responded 'Because you're part of South Miami'. She then tried to grab at Burse and her cell phone in two separate instances (both pictured)

Police identified Dorrbecker as the 'primary aggressor' after watching the video and she was charged with simple battery, a misdemeanor in Florida

'That someone asked you nicely if they should leave your property and you literally sat here and vocalized it’s not your property so you’re harassing someone for no reason?' This is harassment lady, if this isn’t your property...'

Dorrbecker once again says it was not her property and then suddenly tries to grab at Burse, who then hits her in the forehead.

‘You want to put your hands on me, you want to grab at me, get away from me, get the hell away from me,' Burse can be heard telling Dorrbecker as the camera shakes.

Dorrbecker then makes a motion to grab for the phone and Burse tells her, 'Grab my camera again and I'll hit you again.'

Then as Dorrbecker repeatedly cries, 'you hit me, you just hit me,' Burse tells her dog 'Move mojito!' and walks away.

Both women retreated to their nearby phones and called 911, Burse told the Huffington Post.

Burse said the police, who identified Dorrbecker as the 'primary aggressor' after watching the video, asked her if she wanted to press charges and she initially said no.

'She's well into her golden years and just got clocked in her dome,' Burse wrote on Facebook. 'You would think that would teach anyone a lesson, right?'

But when the cops returned to Burse's home and told her Dorrbecker was 'telling them that they couldn't arrest her' and that she was not going to jail, Burse changed her mind.

Burse (pictured right with her fiancé Chris Rick, a delegate for Bernie Sanders) believes the entire confrontation was an example of 'in your face racism'

Dorrbecker, who admitted to police that she tried to grab Burse's cell phone because she doesn't like being recorded, was charged with simple battery.

Burse said she hit Dorrbecker because she felt threatened, and does not regret defending herself.

'Don't try to put your hands on somebody and expect them to react cordially, especially if you were aggressive before that and they were trying to constantly resolve the situation,' Burse told the Miami New Times.

'You're asking for it at that point.'

Burse believed the entire confrontation was an example of 'in your face racism'.

'I couldn't figure out why she had any sort of vendetta against me,' Burse told NBC Miami. 'It was completely unprovoked.'

'A lot of people are saying that there's definite racial connotation. "You don't belong her darkie, like what are you doing here, this is my neighborhood.'"

Burse said she knows exactly what to do if she sees Dorrbecker around the neighborhood again.

'I'm just going to pull out my phone, not say anything, and start recording immediately.'