FINAL BILL REPORT
HB 1168
C 2 L 07
Synopsis as Enacted
Brief Description: Regarding disorderly conduct.
Sponsors: By Representatives Roach, Hurst, Newhouse, Santos, Orcutt, Pettigrew, Moeller, Morrell, Priest, Armstrong, Curtis, Haler, Condotta, Buri, Kristiansen, Alexander, Warnick, Strow, Ericksen, Dunshee, Kirby, Chase, Bailey, Springer, McDonald, Ross, Blake, Kenney, Lovick, Appleton, Darneille, McCoy, O'Brien, Sells, Takko, Williams, VanDeWege, Hunter, Ormsby, Schual-Berke, Pearson, Fromhold, Hinkle, Simpson, Clibborn, Lantz, Linville, Campbell, Kelley, Green, Eddy and McCune.
House Committee on Judiciary
Background:
In recent years, there have been media reports of funerals being disrupted by groups who
have sought to utilize funeral services as a forum for protest. In 1992, Kansas passed the
Kansas Funeral Picketing Act, which makes it a misdemeanor for persons to engage in
picketing activities before or about any cemetery, church, or mortuary within one hour prior
to, during, and two hours following a funeral. Since that time, 27 other states have passed
laws banning or limiting protests around funerals. These laws put limits on a variety of
behavior in the vicinity of funeral or memorial services. The laws vary widely, with some
barring noisy, disruptive behavior, abusive epithets and threatening gestures, or signs with
"fighting words." Some laws bar the proscribed behavior within one or two hours before or
after a funeral, others specify distances ranging from 100 feet to 1,000 feet, and some include
both temporal and physical limitations.
In Kentucky, a federal district court issued a preliminary injunction against enforcement of
two provisions of the Kentucky funeral protest law. One provision prohibits all
demonstrations within 300 feet of a funeral event. The other prohibits, during a funeral, all
sounds or images perceptible to funeral attendees, or the distribution of literature or other
items, without the authorization of the family. The court determined that the Kentucky
statute was content neutral and that funeral attendees have an important interest in avoiding
unwanted, obtrusive communications. However, the court found the challenged provisions
were not narrowly-tailored and burdened substantially more speech than necessary to achieve
the state's objectives.
In Washington, a person is guilty of disorderly conduct, a misdemeanor offense, if he or she
engages in any of the following:
In unpublished opinions addressing the disorderly conduct statute, Washington courts have cited the United States Supreme Court for the proposition that the First Amendment limits the application of disorderly conduct statutes to "fighting words," which are not entitled to First Amendment protection. Washington courts have applied the following three-part test in determining whether a statement constitutes fighting words:
If expression does not constitute fighting words, and thus is entitled to First Amendment
protection, a state may still regulate the expression in certain situations. The constitutional
permissibility of a state regulation of protected expression will depend on a number of
factors, including whether the regulation targets the content of the expression rather than the
expression itself, the location where the expression is taking place, the amount of expression
inhibited, and the nature of the state's interest in regulating that expression.
Disorderly conduct statutes have also been challenged on "void for vagueness" grounds. A
statute is void for vagueness if it is framed in terms so vague that persons of common
intelligence must necessarily guess at its meaning and differ as to its application. The
Washington Supreme Court has held that the following terms in a disorderly conduct statute
were not impermissibly vague: "loud and raucous," "unreasonably disturbs others," and
"disturb."
Summary:
The disorderly conduct statute is amended to include certain disruptive behavior at or near a
funeral, funeral procession, or memorial service. Specifically, a person is guilty of disorderly
conduct if the person:
Votes on Final Passage:
House 89 5
Senate 42 1
Effective: February 2, 2007