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(Added by Ord. No. 114,852, Eff. 12/6/59.)
(a) In the interest of the public health, safety, morals and general welfare, the Board of Police Commissioners may make available to any person possessing a valid press identification card, issued pursuant to the provisions of Section 52.16 of this Code, the record of arrests, criminal charges and dispositions thereof of any person, as contained in the records of the Los Angeles Police Department, and it shall be deemed that the release of such information to such person is in the interest of the public in the due administration and enforcement of the law.
(b) Such information shall be furnished to such persons only upon application therefor in writing, upon forms to be prescribed by the Board of Police Commissioners, which forms shall include a certificate by the applicant stating the applicant’s reasons for requesting such information, the use to be made of such information and a statement that the information sought is in the interest of the public in the due administration and enforcement of the law.
(a) No person required by any provision of Section 52.38 to 52.42 inclusive, to furnish a statement, shall in such statement give any false or fictitious address or any address other than a true address or intended address, or furnish in the making of any such report any false, untrue or misleading information or statement, relating to any information required by any of the provisions thereof to be made or furnished.
(b) Continuing Offense. The duty to furnish statements when and in the manner provided by Sections 52.38 to 52.42
inclusive, is hereby declared to be a continuing one, and for each day that any person required under the provisions of Section 52.38 to 52.42 inclusive to furnish a statement fails to do so, such failure shall constitute a separate offense; provided, however, that no person may be convicted more than once on account of violations occurring by reason of failure, on a series of days, to furnish such statements; provided further, that nothing contained herein shall be deemed to bar subsequent prosecutions for violations of the provisions of this code occurring subsequent to a prior conviction or acquittal of a violation thereof.
It shall be unlawful for any person to willfully listen by means of any radio receiving device located in or upon any vehicle to any official message which is being transmitted by the Police Department or Fire Department of the City of Los Angeles or any law enforcement agency over a radio transmitting station owned or operated by such city or agency. The provisions herein shall not apply to any person to whom a permit to listen to such radio messages has been issued in writing by the Chief of Police of the City of Los Angeles after the Chief of Police determines that public interest will be served by the issuance of such permit, nor shall the provisions of this section apply to any officer, agent, or servant of any government agency or public utility, the performance of whose duty as such officer, agent or servant, requires that the officer, agent or servant listen to such messages.
No person who intercepts, overhears or receives any message or communication transmitted by any radio transmission station operating upon a wave length or radio frequency assigned by the Federal Communication Commission for use by any police or law enforcement department shall, for the financial benefit of themself or another communicate such message or communication to another or directly or indirectly use the information so obtained.
No person shall willfully make to the Police Department of the City any false, misleading or unfounded report, for the purpose of interfering with the operation of the Police Department or with the intention of misleading any police officer.
A false oral statement made upon the initiative of one who resorts to the police department or member thereof for the specific purpose of having some action taken with respect thereto is a violation of the foregoing section.
People v. Minler,(135 Cal. App. 2d Supp. P. 889.)
See also People v. Smith. CRA 3242 (131 Cal. App. 2d Supp. P. 889.)
No person shall willfully, and in a manner not otherwise prohibited by Penal Code Section 597, tease, harass, agitate, provoke, beat, kick, strike, injure, or in any way interfere with, any dog, horse or any other animal being used by any law enforcement officer in the performance of the officer’s official duties. (Added by Ord. No. 157,283, Eff. 1/7/83.)
Persons owning, conducting, managing or operating any building, place or premises other than a private garage, wherein any motor vehicle is parked or stored by or for the public, shall make a written report to the Chief of Police of each motor vehicle not the property of such person, which shall have been parked or stored in such building, place or premises for a period of seventy-two (72 hours continuously. Said written report shall be filed with the police department, within twenty-four 24 hours from and after the expiration of said seventy-two (72) hours, and contain:
(a) The name of the person making such report;
(b) The address of the building, place or premises where such motor vehicle shall have been parked or stored for such seventy-two (72) hour period;
(c) The name and address of the registered owner of such motor vehicle as shown on the certificate of registration issued by the Division of Motor Vehicles of the State of California, or if there be no such certificate of registration in or on such vehicle, such fact shall be stated;
(d) A brief description of such motor vehicle, including the name or make, the motor number and license number thereof as shown by the number plates thereon, together with the name of the state issuing such license plates.
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