(A) A person is a disorderly person if the person is any of the following:
(1) A person of sufficient ability who refuses or neglects to support his or her family.
(2) A common prostitute.
(3) A window peeper.
(4) A person who engages in an illegal occupation or business.
(5) A person who is intoxicated in a public place and who is either endangering directly the safety of another person or of property or is acting in a manner that causes a public disturbance.
(6) A person who is engaged in indecent or obscene conduct in a public place.
(7) A vagrant.
(8) A person found begging in a public place.
(9) A person found loitering in a house of ill fame or prostitution or place where prostitution or lewdness is practiced, encouraged, or allowed.
(10) A person who knowingly loiters in or about a place where an illegal occupation or business is being conducted.
(11) A person who loiters in or about a police station, police headquarters building, county jail, hospital, court building, or other public building or place for the purpose of soliciting employment of legal services or the services of sureties upon criminal recognizances.
(B) A person who is found jostling or roughly crowding people unnecessarily in a public place.
(C) When a person, who has been convicted of refusing or neglecting to support his or her family under this section, is then charged with subsequent violations within a period of two years, that person shall be prosecuted as a second offender, or third and subsequent offender, as provided in M.C.L.A. § 750.168, if the family of that person is then receiving public relief or support.
(M.C.L.A. § 750.167) (‘83 Code, § 131.01) (Ord. 74-010, passed 11-25-74) Penalty, see § 130.99