The 2023 Florida Statutes (including Special Session C)
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. . . Fla. 1st DCA 1994), wherein the district court declared Florida’s anti-cross burning statute, section 876.18 . . . cross on the property of Atef Abdul-Nour in Jacksonville on August 2, 1993, in violation of section 876.18 . . . Section 876.18 prohibits the placing of a flaming cross on the property of another without written permission . . . : 876.18 Placing burning or flaming cross on property of another. — It shall be unlawful for any person . . . Based on the foregoing, we find section 876.18, Florida Statutes (1993), constitutional. . . .
. . . another, without obtaining written permission, a burning or flaming cross, in violation of section 876.18 . . . The trial court held that section 876.18 was unconstitutional on its face because it infringed upon rights . . . We conclude that section 876.18 criminalizes a substantial amount of expression protected by the First . . . T.B.D. was charged with a violation of section 876.18, Florida Statutes (1993), which reads: It shall . . . Employing such an analysis, it is clear that section 876.18 implicates First Amendment considerations . . .
. . . 843.13, 843.17, 847.011(1), (2), (4), 847.0125(2), 847.013(2), 847.06, 847.07, 870.01, 870.02, 876.17, 876.18 . . .
. . . Payments and credits reduced the amount due to $268,-876.18 plus statutory interest. . . .
. . . Bowman, $876.18. . . . Bowman shall be reduced by the amount of $876.18, and it is hereby further ordered that the Revised Plan . . .