My guy...if you are wanting to argue Constitutional exceptions, the US Supreme Court has ruled that making false alarms IS a crime and NOT constitutionally protected speech. So, in this case, re: Schenck vs United States, 249 U.S. 47 (1919), the officer is actually right.
2025-06-14 02:36:25
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green0alien :
inciting a riot.
2025-06-14 01:42:10
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BigO :
2025-06-14 02:33:27
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Kevin Tebo :
Tyrants lawsuit
2025-07-11 14:39:38
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OldManBR549 :
I am not sure what your question means. If you do these things in any kind of setting that (usually) involves a "crowd"---regardless of whether it is in "provate" or "public"----it generally is a "crime".
2025-06-14 16:09:24
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OldManBR549 :
We're you yelling "gun" or "bomb" or some other such where there was none? If so, in Ohio, for example, you COULD be charged either with "Making False Alarms" (ORC 2917.32) or "Inducing Panic" (ORC 2917.31), depending on the severity and reactions from your false, non-constitutionally protected speech.
2025-06-14 02:40:48
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