Nudity and the Law (In the UK, much more sensible!)
When does public nakedness become a crime?BBC Magazine, 3rd September 2009A man who stood naked on a Trafalgar Square plinth was not breaking the law say police, so when does being naked in public become a crime? According to Justin Holwell, he was just expressing his personality when he stripped off on a plinth in London's Trafalgar Square. But ex-detective Mark Williams-Thomas didn't see it that way.He said his wife and children were "annoyed and upset" by Mr Holwell's nakedness. He complained to police but the 24-year-old from Leicestershire was not told to put his clothes back on.A police spokesman said it was not a crime to appear naked in public, but other people have been arrested for it. Naturist Stephen Gough, who goes by the name of The Naked Rambler, is currently in prison in Scotland after being found guilty of breach the peace. So when does it become a crime?Under the Sexual Offences Act 2003 it is not an offence to be naked in public in England and Wales. It becomes an offence if it can be proved the person stripped off with the intention to cause distress, alarm or outrage.Then they run the risk of three possible offences, says a spokesman for law firm Kingsley Napley. These are: Indecent exposure - an offence under section 66 of the Sexual Offences Act 2003 Intentional harassment, alarm or distress under section 4A of the Public Order Act 1986 "Outraging public decency" under common lawIf a case did get to court the onus would be on the prosecution to prove this intention to upset. If found guilty, the offender would face anything from a fine to several years in prison.In Scottish law there is no statutory offence, just the common law offence of offending public decency - a strand of the breach of the peace. The test is essentially the same as in English law - that a member of the public has been put in a state of fear or alarm."With regards all of these offences, whilst there is obviously nudity in this case I suspect it would be very difficult to prove the necessary intent to cause distress, alarm or outrage," says the spokesman. The police spokesman says such complaints are considered on a case-by-case basis.Andrew Welch of British Naturism says the issue all comes down to a person's intention."For obvious reasons we've had to look at this issue with our lawyers," he says."Causing upset is definitely not what naturism is about, our challenge is a cultural one. The law is fine, we just need to change people's attitude to the naked body."SUMMARY OF THE LAW IN ENGLAND& WALES:It's not an offence to be naked in public in England and WalesIt becomes an offence if it can be proved the person stripped off with the intention to upset and shockThe Complainant has to prove this
In many European countries you are expected to be nude to use saunas though pool use is generally restricted. All most British nudists want is parity with Germany, Holland, Belgium and the Scandinavian Countries.
Just to bring you up-to-date, in Scandinavian countries, saunas etc do still allow nudity, but they are almost always sex-segregated rather than mixed. Nudity on Scandinavian beaches is becoming quite rare and even female toplessness is now less common.
SV
All that is stated above seems reasonable as most of the people in the UK and other countries don't normally see nude people walking around the streets every day. I wouldn't say it is offensive, more shocking but i guess that's depends on the person
Since I live in the USA, I am very concerned about being arrested for being nude in public. Going to a nude beach would be a blast, but I hear that there are few places here where you can go to a beach without be bothered.