PC 653m (a) states. “Anyone who, with intent to annoy, contacts another using an electronic device and uses obscene language is guilty. They are also guilty if they threaten harm to the person. Such actions are considered a misdemeanor under the law.
PC 653m (b) states. “Every person who, with intent to annoy, telephones or makes contact by means of an electronic communication device with another and addresses to or about the other person any obscene language or addresses to the other person any threat to inflict injury to the person or property of the person addressed or any member of his or her family, is guilty of a misdemeanor. Nothing in this subdivision shall apply to telephone calls or electronic contacts made in good faith.”
Making a “prank call” is not always a crime in the state of California. However, there are certain characteristics of electronic messages that can make it an illegal act.
The first element of this crime is that you must have sent a message through a form of electronic communication. PC 653m covers calls, voice messages, and visual electronic communication, such as text messages, emails and faxes. You must knowingly and intentionally act, but keep in mind that you did not necessarily have to send the message yourself to face charges for violating PC 653m, as long as it came from your electronic device.
Example: A mother frequently lets her children use her phone to make prank calls to a pizza restaurant for their own amusement. The mother knows that they use her phone for this purpose, and the kids do so repeatedly with the intent to annoy the restaurant workers. The mother could face violation of PC 653m even though she didn’t make the calls, because she knowingly let her kids use her device to do so.
The next element regards the content of the calls or messages sent. They must do one of the following:
Lastly, it must be proven that the messages were sent to harass or annoy the recipient. Even if the messages sound annoying or threatening, it must have been the intent of the sender to do so.
To summarize, the 3 elements of this crime are:
PC 653m is a misdemeanor offense in California, meaning the punishments could include:
While the offense itself does not carry very severe punishments, this is a crime that is commonly associated with others due to the fact that the content of the calls can sometimes lead to more charges. Making a direct threat over the phone would be a violation of PC 653m, for example, but it can also be its own crime (sometimes a felony) as stated in PC 422.
You can use plenty of defenses against a false accusation of violating PC 653m. Some of these are:
The language you used may label as obscene when it actually is not, or you may use obscene language in an environment where it doesn’t constitute illegal activity. Case law protects people who use obscene language with others who have a history of using such language with each other.
EX: Joe calls his friend, Bill, who doesn’t pick up, so he leaves a voice message for him. Joe and Bill are known to use obscene language with each other, so Joe jokingly includes some obscenities in the message. Bill’s wife, who doesn’t know Joe, listens to the message and is disgusted, so she calls the police on Joe and has him arrested for violating PC 653m. Joe should be found innocent because he has an established history of using vulgar language with Bill.
You must have also sent your message with the intention of harassing or annoying someone. This doesn’t just mean someone got annoyed or felt harassed; the sender must have intended to annoy or harass. A telemarketer that calls every day may be annoying, however they do not call with that intention, but rather to sell their product.
Lastly, you may not have known that someone sent the messages, meaning no crime occurred. In reference to the earlier example about a mother’s children using her phone to call a pizza restaurant, the mother may not have known that they were using her phone for that purpose, meaning that it would not be a violation of PC 653m.
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