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.
Illinois courts and the Seventh Circuit have struck down content-based panhandling bans, leaving passive solicitation protected. Aggressive panhandling laws survive when narrowly drawn around conduct rather than speech. The state Criminal Code at 720 ILCS 5/12-1 (assault) and 5/12-3.05 (aggravated battery) reach unwanted touching, blocking, or threats. Cook County Code Ch. 58 (Offenses and Miscellaneous Provisions) prohibits disorderly conduct and similar conduct-based behavior in unincorporated Cook. Many suburban Cook municipalities, including Evanston and Oak Park, repealed broad solicitation bans after Norton v. City of Springfield and now enforce only against threatening or obstructive conduct. Chicago Municipal Code 8-4-025 sets the most detailed urban rule.
Aggressive solicitation involving touching, following, or threats can be charged as assault, battery, or disorderly conduct under 720 ILCS 5/12 and 5/26-1. Convictions range from Class C misdemeanor up to Class 4 felony for aggravated battery.
See how Des Plaines's aggressive panhandling rules stack up against other locations.
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