Is it lewd behavior if outsiders can see you naked in your house?
Hoboken police charge man, 65, with lewdness; could be seen naked through window
https://www.nj.com/jjournal-news/index.ssf/2013/05/hoboken_police_charge_man_65_w.html#incart_river
Poll: Is it lewd behavior if outsiders can see you naked in your house?
https://www.nj.com/hudson/voices/index.ssf/2013/05/poll_is_it_lewd_behavior_if_ou.html#incart_river
Is it lewd behavior if outsiders can see you naked in your house?
Thank you for voting!
Yes 33.16% (63 votes)
No 66.84% (127 votes)
Total Votes: 190
Bob
usually to be lewd the person has to do something to bring attention to themselves. simply standing nude in the vicinity of a window isn't lewd unless the laws in that area are puritanical.
Standing in the window for 15 minutes or more is pushing your luck. If I walk up to the window nude in order to close the curtains, which I do occasionally, I don't think it reasonable for someone to complain.
If someone can see you inside away from the window, nude or otherwise, they need to mind their own business.
In Indianapolis, Indiana simple exposure seen from outside one's property is first a (written) warning, and then an arrest. Public nudity is illegal throughout the state, but not lude. Conduct is an added offence. In fact, most counties don't require the police to do anything about home nudity. It's their call.There should be a complaint and investigation for both the warning and arrest if the officer isn't witness to it. Before the Indy law changed seeing nudity or even sex from outside took the judgement of being intentional. But now there are more hotels and apartments downtown. Some converted office towers that look right into each other. When they first made the change to it being an actual offence the first use of the change was done wrong. No investigation, no warning. Just a complaint that the neighbor's kids had been watching a guy masturbate in his house. The cop just arrested him. ... Turned out to only bevisiblethrough a hole in the high fence that used to block the view to the couch.
{{Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc.501 U.S. 560(1991) is a landmark decision of theSupreme Court of the United Statesonfreedom of speechand the ability of the government to outlaw certain forms of expressive conduct. The issue was whetherIndiana's public indecency law prohibitingtotal nudity in public placesviolated theFirst Amendment.Chief JusticeRehnquistsaid that the law was clearly within the State's constitutional power because it furthered a substantial governmental interest in protecting societal order and morality. Public indecency statutes reflected moral disapproval of people appearing in the nude among strangers in public places, and this particular law followed a line of State laws, dating back to 1831, banning public nudity.}}