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could you get arrested or ticketed for flipping off an on-duty officer? if so, under what law? this is just an in general situation, not during being pulled over or anything like that. just like in passing. answers from officers or from people that know the law are appreciated. i have never done this or plan on doing this, by the way.

2006-07-25 20:43:42 · 19 answers · asked by grave 3 in Politics & Government Law Enforcement & Police

hmm, well i've received many answers. thank you to those who completely read my question and legitimately answered.

i feel like most people answering don't know the law and are just answering based on what they "think" and not what they "know". this does NOT help me find my answer, but congrats on your 2 points.

i also have different people claiming to be officers answering, but with different results. who to believe, i am not sure. i can't find any information online, searching with several paramaters...


is there no ONE LAW in the UNITED STATES which governs this question? is it truly different state by state, county, city, town, neighborhood???

if not/if so can anyone link me up to a site that can back up your answer?

and as i formerly stated, this is not something i have done or would do to an officer. i am doing research. thank you.

2006-07-26 18:21:17 · update #1

19 answers

It may be depending on what state or municipality you are in and what obscenity laws they have on the books.

Just a note: Bad idea even if there is no such law. A police officer can always find a reason to arrest someone. Some officers may laugh it off, but most will not.

2006-07-25 20:49:54 · answer #1 · answered by martin b 4 · 0 0

1

2016-06-10 09:55:54 · answer #2 · answered by Billie 3 · 0 0

The Police uniforms you lease from a dress keep are not a similar. they're made pretty no longer to look the very similar as a real police officials uniform so that you aren't to any extent further entering into hardship. regardless of the very undeniable actuality that i imagine in case you defined to a Police Officer that you've been dressing up and also you probably did not declare to be an Officer and also you're making it generic you aren't to any extent further (plastic batons and toy guns are a good provide away) i do not imagine they could hardship urgent prices.

2016-10-15 05:29:58 · answer #3 · answered by pelt 4 · 0 0

The courts have ruled that this is protected under "freedom of speech". In Texas, this used to be a misdemeanor charge of public lewdness. That law was struck down, and it is not a crime any longer. It now falls into a non-official group of offenses that are included in the P.O.P. (Pissing Off Police) category. You might not get pinched for "expressing" yourself, but you may very well get "scrutinized" for any number of other infractions. Just because it's legal does not mean it's smart. Hell, you can drive nails with a wrench, but that does not make it a good idea. Save yourself the trouble and just curse under your breath.

2006-07-25 20:57:50 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I think they do arrest some people for it, though I think it is unconstitutional!
This is what Colorado says about it!:
Harassment
A person commits harassment if they do any of the following with the intent to annoy or alarm another person:

"* strikes, hits, kicks, shoves, or touches a person or subjects him/her to physical contact
* uses obscene language or makes an obscene gesture to or at someone in a public place
* follows a person in or around a public place"

"S.D. high court: Teen's obscene gestures weren't protected speech

By The Associated Press
06.15.02
PIERRE, S.D. — A teen-ager who flipped up his middle finger and mouthed the f-word several times at a school official was properly convicted of disorderly conduct, the state Supreme Court majority ruled June 13.

But two dissenting justices said the boy, identified only as S.J.N-K. to protect his identity as a juvenile, was within his free-speech rights.

S.J.N-K. made the obscene gestures to Yankton Middle School Principal Wayne Kindle"

"This was not merely the use of one profane word or one obscene gesture, it was an ongoing aggression that falls outside free-speech protection," wrote Chief Justice David Gilbertson.

The encounter with Kindle and his family was prompted because the principal had refused to allow S.J.N-K. to skip eighth grade. The boy later managed to skip the grade and start high school by transferring to Vermillion.

"S.J.N.-K.'s act of retaliation against Kindle for not letting him skip the eighth grade and advance to high school is not political speech," Gilbertson added. "It was an unprovoked form of harassment, done but for no apparent purpose than to incite a violent reaction in Kindle. S.J.N.-K. is not relieved of guilt simply because his attempts to provoke Kindle were unsuccessful."

Former Acting Justice Max Gors, who dissented with Justice Robert A. Amundson in the 3-2 ruling, said S.J.N-K.'s conduct was rude and obnoxious but did not amount to disorderly conduct, especially in a confrontation involving a seasoned school principal.

The boy was protected by the Constitution's free-speech guarantee, Gors wrote, adding that S.J.N-K.'s behavior did not amount to provocative "fighting words" that are outside of the constitutional shroud."


Though I think it is not something one should do, flipping off a seasoned police officer does not constitute a violation of law and I believe protected freedom of speech under the !st Amendment!

2006-07-25 21:07:58 · answer #5 · answered by cantcu 7 · 0 0

"The finger" is an affront against the Police Officer constituting as Disrespect to An Authority and it is punishable under the Penal Code.

2006-07-25 21:02:12 · answer #6 · answered by FRAGINAL, JTM 7 · 0 0

hand signals have been considered under the freedom of speech. they could pull you over and try to ticket as a obscene gesture, but many have not held up in court. if they pulled you over, they could find something to give a traffic ticket for or see something in a car to give reasonable searches.

2006-07-25 20:50:01 · answer #7 · answered by hollywood71@verizon.net 5 · 0 0

Yes. I believe this falls under harrassing an officer, and it can at least get you taken down to the station, if not arrested and fined.

2006-07-25 20:48:00 · answer #8 · answered by redlizzard1121 1 · 0 0

I seriously doubt it but, I would advise against it as it would most likely provoke the officer to take a closer look at your car and try find the tiniest error to fine you.

2006-07-25 20:49:42 · answer #9 · answered by Draco 2 · 0 0

My friend got a disorderly conduct ticket for calling a cop a pig.

2006-07-26 19:08:30 · answer #10 · answered by elliepatchouli 1 · 0 0

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