Santa Clara County Code Title B and California Penal Code Section 647 prohibit aggressive solicitation in unincorporated areas, including blocking pedestrians, threatening conduct, touching, or soliciting near ATMs, bus stops, and outdoor dining. Passive panhandling remains protected speech, but aggressive conduct is enforced by the Sheriff.
Santa Clara County restricts aggressive solicitation rather than panhandling itself, consistent with First Amendment limits set by Reed v. Town of Gilbert and the Ninth Circuit. Title B public-peace provisions and California Penal Code Section 647(c) reach intimidating conduct, intentional physical contact, profane language directed at the donor, blocking sidewalk passage, following a target, or approaching an occupied vehicle. Solicitation near ATMs, bank entrances, transit stops, and outdoor dining areas is also restricted. The Sheriff enforces in unincorporated SCC, while San Jose, Sunnyvale, Mountain View, and other incorporated cities apply parallel municipal codes. Officers typically warn first; repeat or hostile conduct can escalate to misdemeanor charges.
First-offense aggressive solicitation is generally an infraction, fined up to $250 under Title B. Repeated or hostile conduct may be charged as a misdemeanor under California Penal Code Section 647(c) with up to six months jail and additional fines.
See how Sunnyvale's aggressive panhandling rules stack up against other locations.
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