§ 133.25 WHAT CONSTITUTES DISORDERLY CONDUCT.
   It shall be unlawful for any person to knowingly commit or do any of the following enumerated acts which are declared to be disorderly conduct:
   (A)    Any act in such an unreasonable manner as to alarm or disturb another and to provoke a breach of the peace.
   (B)    Loiter in or about any public park, public building, public street, public sidewalk, or other public thoroughfare, or in or about any private property which is generally open and accessible to the public, when loitering:
      (1)    Causes a clear and present danger of riot.
      (2)    Will clearly cause an immediate, actual, physically violent reaction from any person thereby causing a clear and present threat to the public peace.
      (3)    Causes actual interference, disturbance, or annoyance to the comfort or repose of any person using the public property in a lawful and customary manner.
      (4)    Obstructs or interferes with the free and normal passage of pedestrians or vehicles.
   (C)    Fail to depart or disperse from any public park, public building, public street, public sidewalk, or other public thoroughfare or from any private property which is generally open and accessible to the public, upon the order of a duly authorized police officer or other legally authorized conservator of the peace when the order has been given for the purpose of preventing or suppressing any of the foregoing enumerated acts of disorderly conduct.
   (D)    Transmit in any manner to the Fire Department of any city, town, village, or fire protection district a false alarm of fire, knowing at the time of the transmission that there is no reasonable ground for believing that the fire exists.
   (E)    Transmit in any manner to another a false alarm to the effect that a bomb or other explosive of any nature is concealed in such place that its explosion would endanger human life, knowing at the time of the transmission that there is no reasonable ground for believing that the bomb or explosive is concealed in the place.
   (F)    Transmit in any manner to any peace officer, public officer, or public employee a report to the effect that an offense has been committed, knowing at the time of the transmission there there is no reasonable ground for believing that such an offense has been committed.
   (G)    Enter upon the property of another and have a lewd or unlawful purpose, to deliberately look into a dwelling on the property through any window or other opening in it.
(Ord. 82-0-033, passed 9-14-81) Penalty, see § 133.99
Statutory reference:
   Disorderly conduct, see ILCS Ch. 720, Act 5, § 26-1