[HISTORY: Adopted by the Township Council
of the Township of Old Bridge as indicated in article histories. Amendments
noted where applicable.]
GENERAL REFERENCES
Adult entertainment — See Ch. 14.
Alcoholic beverages — See Ch. 30.
Beach and recreation areas — See Ch. 52.
Bows and arrows — See Ch. 67.
Curfew — See Ch. 114.
Festivals; mass gatherings — See Ch. 169.
Graffiti — See Ch. 215.
Littering — See Ch. 265.
Noise — See Ch. 300.
Obscene materials — See Ch. 314.
Motorized recreational vehicles — See Ch. 469.
Youth sports code of conduct — See Ch. 540.
[Adopted 3-29-1945 (Sec. 4-5 of the 1973 Revised General
Ordinances)]
No person shall, within the Township, hinder
or obstruct any police officer in the performance of his duties; nor
shall any person willfully refuse or neglect to assist any police
officer when lawfully called upon by him so to do, in the execution
of any process or in the suppression of any breach of the peace or
disorderly conduct or in case of an escape, or when such officer is
resisted in the discharge of his duty; nor shall any person knowingly
resist or oppose any officer or person authorized by law in serving
or attempting to serve any writ, bill, order or process, or when making
any arrest either with or without a warrant.
[Adopted 1-27-1994 by Ord. No. 6-94 (Sec.
4-16 of the 1973 Revised General Ordinances)]
A.
No person shall urinate or defecate upon lands belonging
to another person or entity, nor shall any person urinate or defecate
upon a public building, street, park or other lands or property owned
by the Township of Old Bridge or any other public agency. It shall
likewise be unlawful for any person to urinate or defecate so as to
be observed by another person.
B.
Nothing in this section shall prohibit a person from
performing such excretory functions in a bathroom, water closet, latrine
or similar site intended for such purposes.
A.
No person shall, with purpose to cause public inconvenience,
annoyance or alarm, or recklessly creating a risk thereof:
B.
No person shall, in a public place, and with purpose
to offend the sensibilities of a hearer or in reckless disregard of
the probability of doing so, address unreasonably loud and offensively
coarse or abusive language, given the circumstances of the persons
present and the setting of the utterance, to any person present. "Public"
means affecting or likely to affect persons in a place to which the
public or a substantial group has access; among the places included
are highways, transport facilities, schools, prisons, apartment houses,
places of business or amusement or any neighborhood.[1]