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🚷 Public Conduct/Aggressive Panhandling

Aggressive Panhandling: Arlington Heights vs Chicago

How do aggressive panhandling rules compare between Arlington Heights, IL and Chicago, IL?

Arlington Heights and Chicago have similar restriction levels.

Arlington Heights, IL

Cook County

Some Restrictions

Passive panhandling is constitutionally protected speech in Illinois, but aggressive solicitation that touches, follows, or threatens a person can be charged as assault under 720 ILCS 5/12-3.05. Cook County Code Ch. 58 mirrors these limits in unincorporated areas; suburbs add their own ordinances.

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Chicago, IL

Cook County

Some Restrictions

Chicago bars aggressive solicitation under Municipal Code of Chicago chapter 8-4. Threatening, blocking, or persistent panhandling near ATMs, banks, transit, and outdoor dining triggers fines and arrest. Passive sign-holding remains protected speech under First Amendment doctrine.

View full Chicago rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactArlington HeightsChicago
Passive requestConstitutionally protected speech-
State assault law720 ILCS 5/12-3.05-
County codeCook Ch. 58 disorderly conduct-
Chicago ruleMCC 8-4-025 aggressive panhandling-
Key caseNorton v. City of Springfield-
City rule-MCC chapter 8-4
ATM buffer-Ten-foot no-solicit zone
State assault statute-720 ILCS 5/12-3.05
Passive sign-holding-Protected First Amendment speech

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Arlington Heights FAQ

Can suburban Cook villages ban all panhandling?

No. After the 2015 Reed v. Town of Gilbert and Norton v. Springfield decisions, content-based bans are unconstitutional. Villages may only restrict aggressive conduct such as touching, blocking, or threats, not the request itself.

What counts as aggressive panhandling?

Conduct that intimidates a reasonable person: touching, following after refusal, blocking a path, profane threats, soliciting at ATMs or transit boarding, or panhandling from a captive vehicle occupant in traffic.

Who enforces in unincorporated Cook County?

The Cook County Sheriff handles unincorporated calls under state Criminal Code charges. Suburban municipalities enforce their own panhandling ordinances through local police departments and municipal court fines.

Chicago FAQ

Can I hold a cardboard sign asking for money?

Yes. Passive sign-holding without blocking sidewalks or approaching people aggressively is protected speech. Officers cannot cite or arrest you for silent solicitation alone.

What counts as aggressive panhandling in Chicago?

Following someone after refusal, blocking their path, touching them, threatening gestures, or soliciting within ten feet of ATMs, bus stops, or outdoor dining all trigger MCC 8-4 enforcement.

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