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Actress Daniele Watts and Brian Lucas speak during an interview with KABC-TV in Los Angeles, Sunday, Sept. 14, 2014. The Los Angeles Police Department said Sunday that officers detained Watts and her companion last week after a complaint that two people were "involved in indecent exposure" in a silver Mercedes. Watts was detained until police determined no crime was committed. (AP Photo/KABC-TV) Image Credit: AP

An actress who was detained by Los Angeles police is refusing to apologise for claiming race played a role in the incident, despite calls from local civil rights leaders.

Daniele Watts issued a statement late on Friday through her publicist after civil rights activists demanded that she apologise for suggesting she was handcuffed for kissing her white boyfriend in public.

Watts and boyfriend Brian Lucas were questioned last week by officers investigating a report of lewd conduct in a parked car. Watts, who is black, refused to provide identification. She was briefly handcuffed until police identified her.

The incident went viral after she and Lucas claimed on their Facebook pages that the detention reflected racial profiling. Audio later surfaced that indicated it was Watts who introduced race to the interaction with police.

Civil rights leader Earl Ofari Hutchinson, who initially rallied behind the actress, said she “cried wolf” in this instance. “I was one that was very outspoken about it,” he told reporters. “We take racial profiling very seriously. It’s not a play thing. It’s not trivial.”

Watts made no mention of race in her statement, but she maintained that she wasn’t obligated to present identification to police. “It is a constitutional right that we do not have to present ID to any member of law enforcement unless we are being charged with a crime,” she said.

A Los Angeles Police spokeswoman said on Friday the department had no response to Watts’ statement.

Watts’ publicist, Bill McCoy, said she is not planning to take further action.