9.78.010 Disorderly conduct.
A. A person is guilty of disorderly conduct if they:
1. Fight or encourage others to fight in any public place within the city;
2. Intentionally create the risk of an assault by willfully annoying, bothering, insulting, or offering an affront to another person;
3. Willfully break, impair, injure or deface any building, fence, awning, window, sign, signboard, tree, shrub, or other thing of value being the property of another;
4. Intentionally obstruct vehicular or pedestrian travel or traffic without lawful authority;
5. Remove, interfere with, carry away or destroy the property of another, or tear down, destroy or mutilate any notice or handbill lawfully posted in the city;
6. Intentionally disrupt any lawful assembly or meeting of persons without lawful authority;
7. Look into the windows of the residence of another without a lawful right to do so;
8. Urinate or defecate in any place open to the public view, other than in a restroom or toilet facility; or
9. Intentionally engage in conduct that tends to, or is reasonably likely to, disturb the peace, promote disorder or endanger the safety of others.
B. Disorderly conduct is a misdemeanor punishable by a maximum penalty of 90 days in jail and/or a $1,000 fine. (Ord. 6781 § 5, 2020; Ord. 6503 § 1, 2014; Ord. 5682 § 1, 2002.)