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Judge Throws Out Panhandling Law, Says Physical Interaction Is Free Speech

A federal court threw out the law enacted in Hot Springs, Ark., that applied to someone approaching a vehicle. The judge ruled the law violated the First Amendment's protection on free speech.
In this file photo, a panhandler begs for money in downtown Cincinnati.

When a panhandler approaches a car in the intersection — his hand out, his eyes wide — that physical interaction is protected by the First Amendment, a federal district judge ruled Monday when he threw out an Arkansas city's panhandling ban.

It's the latest such ban to be found unconstitutional since a 2015 had to do with , but courts around the country have cited the case as they panhandling laws.

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