No, Illinois does not criminalize everyday jaywalking or littering as casually broken “secret” laws—they are enforceable petty offenses with defined penalties under the Illinois ...
No, Pennsylvania does not prohibit bear wrestling— that’s a law from Missouri, where it’s classified as a class A misdemeanor under RSMo Section 578.176, ...
No, chopping down a cactus isn’t a quirky “weird property law” in Colorado—it’s a serious violation tied to environmental protection statutes. The myth exaggerates ...
Kentucky lacks a specific law declaring pickles illegal or requiring them to bounce, contrary to some viral myths. That quirky “bouncing pickle” rule actually ...
Arizona’s Native Plant Protection Act strictly regulates protected cacti like saguaros, even on private property. Cutting or destroying one without a permit is a ...
Vermont landlord-tenant laws balance tenant protections with landlord rights under Title 9, Chapter 137 of state statutes. Renters enjoy strong safeguards like habitability requirements ...
In Georgia, rainwater falling on private property generally belongs to the landowner, distinct from running water in streams, which follows riparian rights principles. Landowners ...
Retail permit holders can deliver sealed beer, unfortified/fortified wine, and mixed drinks (up to two per customer, under 24 oz each) statewide, but only ...
New Mexico Statutes § 66-7-335 requires pedestrians to use crosswalks where available, yield to vehicles when crossing elsewhere, and obey traffic signals; violations constitute ...