Stealing Trash is Not a Crime
Categories: Bay Area News, City of Concord Headlines, Focus on Concord
Written By: Mayor Concord California
A local blog called Myrtle Drive has had it’s fair share of issues lately. From burglaries, car break ins and even mail theft, crooks seem to like this stretch of road. Most recently there have been reports that people have been rooting through the peoples garbage and possibly stealing stuff.
In 1988 the US Supreme Court ruled that trash-picking is legal. But even before that, there are centuries-old precedent laws going back to Jolly Old England that establish as a veritable “right” for scavengers to obtain & keep or sell anything they find in the trash.
There are laws protecting people’s garbage. But they are loose laws at best. The laws are wrapped around criminal intent to use the stolen good for other crimes like ID theft. There is no crime against digging through someones garbage and taking something that someone has no more use for. Once the trash hits the street, it can be looked through by the public. It’s no longer your personal stuff. Sure, it’s weird to go through a garbage can and most epople wouldn’t do it but it’s not illegal.
Stealing recyclables is against the law. This came about several years ago when the city started a recycling program and people would just drive down the street collecting recyclable stuff then turning it in for a profit at the local recycling center. The City of Concord and the garbage company wanted to make sure they weren’t losing any money so they passed an ordinance.
Exceptions are when dumpsters are locked, are inside gates, or posted no trespassing, or when there specific municiple restrictions which would regard it as theft to remove material from recycle bins as distinct from trash dumpsters of mixed refuse.
By & large when it’s in the trash, it’s fair game, whether you’re the cops going through the trash looking for evidence without a search warrant (in most cases, they don’t need a search warrant), a crazy nosy neighbor reading then posting on the web someone’s discarded correspondence (no legal right to privacy if it is thrown in the trash, though some copyright protections to reproducing or “publishing” it might apply), a hungry homeless guy looking for pizza rinds, a craftsperson looking for weird junk to weld together into “art”, a junk dealer looking for salable freebies, a major recycling company contracting with the city or county but not with whomever threw out the garbage, or a dumpster-diving hobbyist, such as a gardener, salvaging thrown-out potted plants or burst-open compost bags from behind a Walmart or Home Depot or from a compost heap at the cemetery.
The illegal part would be depositing your own trash in someone else’s dumpster; circumventing a lock; or leaving a mess. When trash is on the curb or alley, there is not even a trespassing issue, but on business tarmacks or parking lots the issue of trespassing can become clouded, though if legal access is generally permitted for customers, so too it is for dumpster divers.
Garbage left on a property that does not permit general access is illegal to take — that worn out couch on the curb you can take, but when it was still sitting on the front lawn getting rained on & moldy, it remained the homeowner’s personal possession. There are also “intellectual property” issues. For instance, if I throw out a manuscript for an original short story & you find it, the manuscript is yours, but you can’t publish it; or if you find a computer harddrive, it’s yours, but the software on it might not be legally transferable; & so on.
Most dumpster diving is behind retail shops. The restriction (with exceptions) is usually a lock, not a law. No lock, no prohibition. Dumpster diving has become so common, though, that some cities feel the need to regulate diving, as sometimes guys with big trucks drive through alleys getting recyclables & whatnot, & sometimes bums leave nuisance calling-cards like all the black plastic bags ripped open & scattered about a parking area. A few states or municipalities are mostly concerned with dumpster diving only for the sake of taxing such microbusinesses which scrounge & sell enough stuff to make a living, who often fall underneath the radar of taxing authorities.
Habitual dumpster divers sometimes keep photocopies of articles on the Supreme Court ruling to give to irate shop owners who threaten to call the cops on dumpster divers. Politely informing them of the law, as long as it’s not rudely expressed, & your reassurance that you’ll be following the law by leaving no mess, usually shuts them up. If the owner doesn’t care if it’s legal or not but just wants you to go the hell away, they will have to post a no-trespassing sign or put a lock on their dumpster. As many do. Otherwise, if it’s in the trash, you can have it.
Some businesses put stuff out back beside the dumpster with the expectation that it will be hauled away by dumpster divers, & they’re glad of it, it keeps them from having to pay for a bigger dumpster. But in some cases, as with bins of cardboard & paper which earn some stores a kick-back on its recycle value, or pallets of broken bricks or pavers which are picked up by the wholesaler for full credit & crushed to reuse, this type of material is not actually in the trash & one must be careful not to steal anything based on proximity to the trash, as this might indeed be an outright theft. This is why your basketball hoop is safe.
When in doubt, ask permission, but be prepared for disappointment. I once asked at Home Depot if I could have the broken bricks tossed out by the trash & was told yes I could take any of those I wanted. But at a later date I asked at the same store for the same sort of broken masonry bits, I was told I could not have them because they would be picked up by the manufacturer for credit to the store.
The majority of illegally used c.c. numbers are obtained by dumpster diving. Yet people worry about emailing such information, which is still the minority source of stolen numbers (even hackers rely on info found in dumpsters. Dumpsters are the best places to find passwords). If your personal stats are in the trash, they can be legally taken by anyone who finds them, but their use of them will be illegal, which fact won’t deter criminals.
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March 17th, 2009 at 12:00 pm
Why are these people worried about someone taking there trash? Its garbage people, not news!
March 17th, 2009 at 12:20 pm
Best bet is get a good cross cut paper shredder and shed everything you throw away. Even taking the recyclables is alright as long as you don’t get caught. No one at the local recycling center is going to say anything if you show up with 50 lbs of cardboard. There is no way to rack it. Not like copper or something.
March 17th, 2009 at 12:24 pm
BTW. Happy St. Patties Day Mayor!
March 17th, 2009 at 2:48 pm
Actually, stealing recyclables is considered theft in Concord. You can go to Concord Disposal’s website for more information or check out my blog.
Susan’s last blog post..Dumpster Diver on Myrtle
April 4th, 2009 at 10:57 pm
A lot of the objection to the taking of the recyclables is that it is attracting street people to your curb and they make a lot of noise when they go about their ‘taking’.
It can and has been argued that recyclables are not trash but a contract between the disposal company and the homeowner since the cans/bottles are not being thrown away but are part of a business arrangement that generates
April 4th, 2009 at 10:57 pm
A lot of the objection to the taking of the recyclables is that it is attracting street people to your curb and they make a lot of noise when they go about their ‘taking’.
It can and has been argued that recyclables are not trash but a contract between the disposal company and the homeowner since the cans/bottles are not being thrown away but are part of a business arrangement that generates money.
June 1st, 2009 at 9:48 pm
We have been in the Gaming market for years
October 26th, 2009 at 1:00 pm
stealing garbage is indeed a crime, a misdemeanor trespassing crime in fact (see city ordinances and state law -code 602), that one can be arrested and fined $1000, 000 for if violated. once a person takes ANYTHING from said property, be it upon cultivated land or not, other than the landowner and/or their representatives it automatically becomes a TRESPASSING offense. the issue is more about SAFETY than anything else. dumpster-diving by unchecked prowlers today, and home invasion, property theft, rape and child abduction tomorrow. good neighborhoods become ghettos over time when ghetto people start invading upscale neighborhoods unabated. trespassing prowlers have no business in communities where they don’t belong. residential trespassing for any reason is a serious offense and/or thing, and should be viewed as STRANGERS invading the very boundaries of one’s home, where beloved children, wives and husband relax in peace, not terrorized night & day. even out-reach programs for the poor require sign-in monitoring with name, ss# and address for security purposes. what protection against would-be criminals of crime of convenience of people hiding behind the moniker of dumpster diving do unprotected residences have against these home boundary invaders from slum neighborhoods have? a video camera and a relentless neighborhood watch are great weapons. civic duty and home conscious people in So-Cal rise up, asking city officials and mayors to step down for violating city ordinances and stale laws pertaining to their refusal to take action against rampant residential prowling trespassers via so-called dumpster divers.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5dha5A9vsdk
rotten eggs, paintball, water balloons filled with whatever, bear pepper spray, etc. are great deterrents as well, that say YOU ARE NOT WELCOME, go away! evil prevails when good men refuse to act.