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CRIMES AGAINST PUBLIC ORDER AND PUBLIC DECENCY Chapter 8 CRIMES AGAINST PUBLIC ORDER  Early common law concerned with preserving peace and order  Included in statutes in England and early statutes in United States  Thought necessary to criminalize behaviors that might incite people to fight or retaliate in other ways  Common law and modern statutes include of fenses punishable primarily because they invade society’s peace and tranquility BREACH OF THE PEACE  Willfully committed act that disturbs public tranquility or order and for which there is no legal justification  Under common law, crime covered numerous actions  Statutes frequently held unconstitutional  May infringe on right to assemble or right to free speech  Tend to be vague or too broad FIGHTING WORDS  Similar to breach of peace  Words that tend to incite violence by person to whom they are directed  More like a slap on the face than communication of ideas      Not protected by First Amendment right to free speech Key cases deciding doctrine are old Cohen v. California (1971) State v. Thompson (Ohio 2002) Cases suggest any conviction under this doctrine will be examined closely and may be reversed DISORDERLY CONDUCT  Minor of fenses that disturb peace or behavior standards of community or shock morality of its population  Some acts covered by common law breach of peace are typical acts covered by modern disorderly conduct statutes  Statutes vary considerably from one jurisdiction to another VAGRANCY AND LOITERING  Common law referred to act or condition of wandering about from place to place without any visible means of support, refusing to work even though able to do so, and living of f charity of others  Most vagrancy laws declared unconstitutional  Tend to discriminate against racial and ethnic minorities and poor  Too vague and overbroad  Some modern statutes use term loitering  May be upheld if they are clear VAGRANCY AND LOITERING  Milwaukee v. Nelson (Wis. 1989)  People v. Superior Cour t (Cal. 1988)  Wyche v. State (Fla. 1993) and Holliday v. City of Tampa (Fla. 1993)  In recent years, many cities and states have enacted ordinances or statutes preventing certain acts in public places  Chicago v. Morales (1999)  Supreme Court ruled Chicago ordinance vague and thus unconstitutional  Chicago revised statute and in 2002 it was upheld against a constitutional challenge CRIMINALIZATION OF HOMELESSNESS  In 2015, surveys revealed homelessness in Los Angeles area had jumped 12% during previous two years  Similar reports on other cities included violent attacks on homeless people and other issues  Homeless people subject to criminal violence and restrictions by government  Can be expected local ordinances and state and federal laws will continue to be challenged in courts ALCOHOL- AND DRUG-RELATED OFFENSES: PUBLIC INTOXICATION AND DRUG INCAPACITATION  Statutes are based on assumption abusers disturb public order or morality and may be threat to themselves or others  Can be designated as separate crime  Can also raise serious debate on constitutional issues  Powell v. Texas (1968)  U.S. Supreme Court upheld defendant’s conviction based on conclusion his being drunk in public was an act, not a condition  Some jurisdictions have enacted statutes that emphasize treatment and rehabilitation ALCOHOL- AND DRUG-RELATED OFFENSES: DRIVING UNDER THE INFLUENCE (DUI)  It is illegal to operate motor vehicle while under influence of alcohol or other drugs  Jurisdictions vary on how they define of fenses and what they are called  Some jurisdictions now emphasize treatment and rehabilitation  It is also illegal for licensees to sell to a person who is obviously intoxicated ALCOHOL- AND DRUG-RELATED OFFENSES: ALCOHOL OFFENSES AND MINORS  Some substance-related of fenses are prohibited only for persons under specified age  Sale of alcohol to minors  All jurisdictions regulate sale, giving, or furnishing alcohol to persons under legal drinking age  Minors in possession  Refers to broad array of situations  Does not require minor to ingest substance  Active or constructive possession is enough  May also apply to other acts  Legal age of majority may be lower in these instances UNLAWFUL ASSEMBLY, ROUT, AND RIOT  Under common law, referred to meeting of three or more persons to disturb public peace with intention of participating in forcible and violent execution of unlawful enterprise or lawful enterprise in unauthorized manner  To constitute unlawful assembly, group need not carry out its purpose  Rout  If group takes steps carry out purpose  Riot  If group actually carries out its plan UNLAWFUL ASSEMBLY, ROUT, AND RIOT  Riot and rout come from same root word: rout  Used to communicate those who have assembled unlawfully are on their way  English Riot Act of 1714  Made it a capital felony for 12 or more persons to continue together for hour after official order was given to disperse  Official command of dispersal called reading the riot act UNLAWFUL ASSEMBLY, ROUT, AND RIOT  Some modern statutes retain crimes of unlawful assembly and riot  Fewer retain rout  Most statutes classify riots as misdemeanors  Some provide for aggravated riots as felonies  Some may provide for additional penalties if other crimes committed  Some include related crimes  Some classify based on seriousness WEAPONS OFFENSES  Under common law, misdemeanor to breach the peace by carrying dangerous or unusual weapons  Most U.S. jurisdictions today have statutes regulating sale, possession, and carrying f weapons  Statutes differ vastly  Many have been tested in courts  Jurisdictions have enacted numerous gun laws in attempt to deter crime  United States v. Castleman (2014) OBSTRUCTING A HIGHWAY OR PUBLIC PASSAGE  Authorities have right to regulate flow of traf fic and people on public streets, highways, and sidewalks  Individuals do not have right to block access of those public areas  Problems in enforcing arise when statutes are vague or overbroad  Permit too much discretion in enforcement efforts  Problems also arise when enforcement infringes on free speech without justifiable reasons ANIMAL ABUSE  Ignored in past but now treated as criminal  Arises in context of using animals for research and ways in which people treat or neglect their pets or other animals  Attracting more attention due to research showing it is often committed by those who engage in violence against humans  Numerous states have enacted statutes  Not all are in criminal codes ANIMAL ABUSE  Some statutes have been ruled as too broad or as violating constitutional rights  United States v. Stevens (2010)  Views of cruelty to animals dif fer by jurisdiction  Congress passed Animal Crush Video Prohibition Act of 2010  Statute challenged in Texas case decided by Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals  Court upheld statute HARASSMENT  Some jurisdictions criminalize various techniques  Some may be included under other statutes  Statutes may be categorized by degrees  Some may specify types, such as harassment against persons due to particular characteristics  Statutes may also include language qualifying the characteristics  Note it is based on perception of actor concerning those characteristics that is critical  Acts may be defined as felonies or misdemeanors OFFENSES AGAINST PUBLIC DECENCY  Disagreement over whether criminal law should cover private, consensual behavior between adults, and if so, to what extent  Historically, many acts described in this category were considered within area of morality  To be governed by church rather than state  Early criminal statutes patterned after biblical laws  Massachusetts Code of 1648  In past two decades many jurisdictions have decriminalized some of the behaviors  Debate remains over who should control morality PROSTITUTION  Indiscriminate sexual acts for hire  Historically accepted as inevitable, even essential  Some societies practice was not only accepted, but esteemed  Critics claim t exploits women (in some cases children) and contribute to spread of disease  Illegal in United States in all but some rural counties in Nevada  Statutes regulating prostitution vary  So do definitions of term PROSTITUTION  Some statutes specify women as of fenders, but others also include men  Of fense may include not only prostitute but also any persons who solicit or promote the business of prostitution or who live of f the prostitute’s earnings  Special terms used to criminalize those persons  Pandering  Procuring or securing a person, usually female, to satisfy lust of another, usually male or catering to lust of another person  Also called pimping PROSTITUTION  Despite attempts to legalize, most agree attempts to use children should be a crime  Some have enacted statutes to cover  Coincides with current focus of FBI  National Center for Missing and Exploited Children  Emphasize child prostitution is threat worldwide  Argued prostitution should be criminalized due to link with other crimes HUMAN TRAFFICKING  Trafficking for sex purposes not the only manifestation of crime  Other reasons for trafficking  See Focus 8.3  FBI emphasizes eradication is priority  Also occurs in criminal arena  Generates billions of dollar annually  One of fastest growing criminal activities OBSCENIT Y, LEWDNESS, AND INDECENCY  Behavior defined by a number of terms  Describes variety of behaviors some people find of fensive  To extent criminal law is trying to curb them  Acts generally defined as misdemeanors  Carry only slight penalties  Some statutes rarely, if ever, enforced LEWDNESS AND INDECENCY  Statutes prohibiting lewdness are brief and general  Pennsylvania  Other statutes mention specific acts  Idaho Criminal Code  Some dif ficult to interpret  Particularly when intent is an element  Statutes may encompass speech as well as conduct  United States v. A Naked Person Issued Notice of Violation No. P419490 (M.D.Fla. 1993)  May be unconstitutional OBSCENIT Y  Court has had dif ficulty defining obscenity  Stanley v. Georgia (1969)  Mere private possession of obscene matter in one’s own home is not a crime  U.S. Supreme Court emphasized right of states to regulate  Miller v. California (1973)  U.S. Supreme Court articulated three criteria, all of which must be met, for information to be considered obscene OBSCENIT Y  FCC et al. v. Fox Television Stations, Inc. et al. (2012)  U.S. Supreme Court considered issue of whether FCC’s indecency policy is unconstitutional  Indecent speech is protected  Obscenity is not protected  Any infringement on speech must be analyzed by strict scrutiny  Policy may not be vague SODOMY  Some jurisdictions define consensual sodomy as crime  Idaho statute  Prohibits infamous crimes against nature  To avoid problems of vagueness, some statutes were revised to include specific acts  California  Other jurisdictions do not use term in statutes  Use alternate terms  Bowers v. Hardwick (1986)  U.S. Supreme Court upheld Georgia anti-sodomy statute SODOMY  Christensen v. State (Ga. 1996)  Powell v. State (Ga. 1996)  Lawrence v. Texas (2003)  U.S. Supreme Court declared Texas statute unconstitutional  Overruled Bowers v. Hardwick (1986)  Obergefell et al. v. Hodges et al. (2015)  U.S. Supreme Court upheld right of gays and lesbians to marry SEDUCTION AND FORNICATION  Seduction not a crime under common law  Established by statute in many jurisdictions  Seduction  Historically referred to act by man who used solicitation, persuasion, promises, bribes, or other methods to entice woman to have unlawful sexual intercourse with him  Was a felony  Some statutes provided for negation of crime if subsequent marriage occurred between parties SEDUCTION AND FORNICATION  Modern trend has been to repeal seduction statutes  Those that remain generally categorize as misdemeanor  Even when repealed, laws may criminalize act of inducing consent by use of fraud or fear  Statutes may limit ages of victims  Fornication  Another sex act considered a crime in some jurisdictions  Refers to unlawful sexual intercourse between two unmarried persons of opposite genders  Some jurisdictions do not limit to opposite sex parties ADULTERY  Consensual sexual intercourse between married person and someone other than his or her spouse  Not crime under common law  Was an ecclesiastical offense     Has various definitions Earlier laws provided only for female to commit crime Some statutes distinguish between single and double adultery Current rend is toward repealing statutes  Those still in effect rarely enforced BIGAMY  Knowingly and willingly contracting marriage when he or she is aware another marriage is undissolved  Considered crime against the family  Some jurisdictions consider crime one of strict liability  Not crime under common law  Historically been criminalized in United States  Few prosecutions have occurred  New York  Bigamy is felony; adultery is misdemeanor PORNOGRAPHY  Not illegal for adults to possess unless it is child pornography  Considered sexual exploitation of those children  Congress and many states have enacted statutes to combat child pornography  Protection of Children Against Sexual Exploitation Act of 1977     Lengthy statute Imposes liability on actors engaging in child pornography Provides for forfeiture for those engaging in acts Statute has long prison sentences PORNOGRAPHY  Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition (2002)  U.S. Supreme Court upheld virtual child pornography  Images created by computer simulations that make adults look like children  In reaction to case, Congress passed legislation  PROTECT Act of 2008  Contains provisions aimed at protecting children from sexual assaults, pornography, kidnapping, and other crimes PORNOGRAPHY  United States v. Williams (2008)  U.S. Supreme Court upheld constitutionality of PROTECT Act  Communications Decency Act (CDA)  Criminalizes making indecent or patently offensive words or pictures available online where children can find them  Ruled too broad in Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union (1997) PORNOGRAPHY  United States v. American Library Association (2003)  U.S. Supreme Court upheld provision of Children’s Online Protection Act (COPA)  Requires libraries to place filters on computers so children cannot have access to pornography when using library computers  Adults may have filters removed  Failure to comply with act results in loss of federal funds provided to libraries to enhance Internet access PORNOGRAPHY: SEXTING  Teens also create and disseminate information considered to be pornographic  Questions arise as to how to deal with issue  Who is the victim?  Are new statutes needed for this fact pattern? PORNOGRAPHY: REVENGE PORN  Pornographic images published without permission of subjects  One of the most recent categories of pornography  Usually stem from couples breaking up and one or both parties publish pornographic pictures of other online for “revenge”  Copyright law has proven a useful tool in dealing with issue in courts  Criminal charges have also been successful