Disorderly Conduct and the 2nd Departments recent decision of Cassie v. Cassie
In the criminal context disorderly conduct is only that conduct which occurs in a public place and extends to a "point where it becomes a potential or immediate public problem". In the context of a Family Court Order of Protection it does not have to extend to a public problem and includes behavior "not in a public place". However it gets very tricky because the Petitioner still has to prove that the offender committed the act with intent to cause or recklessly pose a risk of causing public inconvenience, annoyance, or harm. The 2nd Dept. in Cassie v. Cassie reversed...
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