Disorderly Conduct Lawyer

Do I need a lawyer for a disorderly conduct charge in Rhode Island?

By |2026-05-24T00:18:01-04:00May 24, 2026||

Yes. Even though disorderly conduct is a misdemeanor, the conviction creates a permanent criminal record that affects employment background checks for years. A defense lawyer can negotiate reduction to civil infractions or diversion programs that avoid conviction entirely, challenge the prosecution evidence (often weak in these cases), and resolve the Read More

Can disorderly conduct charges be expunged in Rhode Island?

By |2026-05-24T00:17:55-04:00May 24, 2026||

Yes. Disorderly conduct convictions in Rhode Island can be expunged after a 5-year waiting period from completion of sentence, provided you have no subsequent convictions during the waiting period. Disorderly conduct is a misdemeanor and follows the standard misdemeanor expungement timeline. Dismissed disorderly conduct cases or non-conviction outcomes may be Read More

Will disorderly conduct appear on my background check in Rhode Island?

By |2026-05-24T00:17:51-04:00May 24, 2026||

Yes. A Rhode Island disorderly conduct conviction creates a permanent criminal record visible on standard employment, housing, and licensing background checks. The conviction stays visible permanently unless successfully expunged after a 5-year waiting period from completion of sentence. Some background check companies report misdemeanors for 7 years under federal Fair Read More

Can disorderly conduct be reduced to a civil infraction in Rhode Island?

By |2026-05-24T00:17:45-04:00May 24, 2026||

Sometimes. Rhode Island prosecutors will occasionally agree to reduce disorderly conduct charges to civil infractions or non-criminal violations, particularly for first offenders with no prior record and when the underlying conduct was minor. Common reductions include disorderly conduct to a non-criminal municipal violation or to dismissal with completion of community Read More

Is disorderly conduct the same as public intoxication in Rhode Island?

By |2026-05-24T00:17:40-04:00May 24, 2026||

Related but not identical. Rhode Island does not have a standalone public intoxication statute, but public intoxication that causes disturbance can support a disorderly conduct charge. Simply being drunk in public without causing disturbance is not generally criminal in Rhode Island. The charge requires the intoxication to result in behavior Read More

Can disorderly conduct be defended in Rhode Island?

By |2026-05-24T00:17:35-04:00May 24, 2026||

Yes. Rhode Island disorderly conduct cases can be defended through several angles. First Amendment protection applies to speech-based disorderly conduct allegations — the conduct must rise above protected speech to be criminal. Defense angles include lack of actual public disturbance (private conduct or conduct that did not affect bystanders), self-defense Read More

What are the penalties for disorderly conduct in Rhode Island?

By |2026-05-24T00:17:29-04:00May 24, 2026||

Disorderly conduct penalties in Rhode Island include up to 6 months jail and fines up to $500 for first offense. Subsequent offenses can carry longer sentences and higher fines. Most first-offense disorderly conduct cases resolve with fines, community service, and probation rather than jail. The conviction creates a permanent criminal Read More

What is disorderly conduct in Rhode Island?

By |2026-05-24T00:17:24-04:00May 24, 2026||

Disorderly conduct in Rhode Island is a catch-all misdemeanor under R.I. Gen. Laws § 11-45-1 covering a range of behaviors that disturb public peace including fighting, threatening, violent or tumultuous behavior, public intoxication causing disturbance, and disturbing assemblies or meetings. Penalties include up to 6 months jail and fines up Read More