It's not THAT hot! Mystery woman pictured walking TOPLESS through streets of New York... and now (surprise, surprise) she's an internet star



With soaring temperatures and high humidity, New Yorkers have had a tough time keeping cool over the last week.



But for one woman, the rising mercury proved too much after she was pictured walking the sweltering streets bare breasted before apparently being fined by NYPD cops.

Nicknamed 'Topless Bowery Woman' after the street where she was first spotted, the novel approach to keeping cool has won her an army of on-line fans who tracked her whereabouts in the city throughout Monday.



Bare: 'Naked Bowery Lady' sparked an on-line frenzy after walking the streets of NYC with out a top

Soon after the first picture appeared on Tuesday morning, word of the woman quickly spread around the internet, with sightings or her naked jaunt posted by excited bloggers.

She was first spotted on Bowery street by Matt Kosoy walking 'briskly' with a handbag over her shoulder.

Moments later Olivia Knoepfel posted a picture and tweeted: ' did i just see a topless girl on bowery?

Carolina Ramirez later tweeted: 'Saw her maybe around 230pm near central park on 5th and 69th St'.

But the bold woman didn't get far before she was stopped by police and apparently issued with a fine.

Update: Twitter users kept people informed of the mystery topless woman's movements

Busted: The daring woman is seen apparently receiving a fine from New York's finest

But as several bloggers pointed out, it is legal for women to walk topless on the streets of New York.

In 1992, Ramona Santorelli and Mary Lou Schloss and five other women successfully challenged their arrest for violating a law that forbade them showing 'that portion of the breast which is below the top of the areola.'

Arguing they were being discriminated against, New York Court of Appeals court ruled that the law was 'discriminatory on its face since it defines 'private or intimate parts' of a woman's but not a man's body as including a specific part of the breast.'

Speaking to The Village Voice, NYPD Deputy Commissioner of Public Information Paul Browne said: 'The state's highest court established long ago that women have the same right as men to appear topless in public.