Coconino County keeps no county-wide no-knock registry, but a posted "No Soliciting" or "No Trespassing" sign carries legal force. A solicitor who enters after notice can be charged with criminal trespass under Arizona law.
Unwanted solicitors in unincorporated Coconino County are handled through Arizona's criminal trespass statutes (A.R.S. § 13-1502 through § 13-1504). A clearly posted "No Soliciting" or "No Trespassing" sign, or a direct spoken warning, supplies the notice that makes continued presence unlawful, and a Coconino County Sheriff's deputy can act once the person enters or refuses to leave after that notice. Cities including Flagstaff, Sedona, and Page may keep their own no-knock or do-not-solicit provisions in their peddler ordinances that add penalties inside city limits.
A solicitor who enters or remains after a posted sign or verbal warning commits criminal trespass, enforced by the Sheriff's Office or city police. Third-degree criminal trespass is a class 3 misdemeanor.
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See how Page's no-knock registry rules stack up against other locations.
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