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Saturday, January 29, 2011

Is it illegal to take food from dumpsters? even if your are hungry?


Is it illegal to take food from dumpsters?

The information written here is not legal advice and the author of this blog is not your lawyer. These posts merely contain ideas to help you plan and organize your legal research and identify potentially helpful sources of law. ****


Sometimes because of local ordinances against providing food to the homeless, such as laws requiring costly permits to conduct group meals, hungry people seek out food that has been thrown away. My name is Laura and lost my home and job and had no food for five days and found myself looking in dumpsters for food. If property has been abandoned, then it no longer belongs to the previous owner and taking it is not stealing.

In some cases, generally when trash is outside and expected to be picked up by the trash collectors, the courts have considered the trash to be abandoned property in which the person who discarded it would have no expectation of privacy. These were not cases about hungry people taking food. These cases were about police officers who, in gathering potential evidence from garbage cans, were accused of conducting illegal searches. See California v. Greenwood at http://supreme.justia.com/us/486/3.

When the trash is stored indoors or in a secluded area, it is often not considered abandoned.

Business-owned dumpsters, located on a business’s own private property and not shared by multiple businesses might not contain abandoned property. Dumpster companies provide lockable lids, so businesses can lock their dumpsters and keep their trash inaccessible can lock their dumpsters. Many businesses lock their dumpsters to prevent thieves from stealing account numbers and other private information.


Maybe the law should require that non-perishable food be bagged separately or that food be packaged against bacteria and labeled with the date. To research this kind of idea, look for court cases about “premises liability”. The most efficient way to find court cases is to go through a printed case index or an electronic database. LexisOne is free online database where you can search for the past ten years’ cases. Look for print sources and other databases at your county law library. See also the list of self-help legal research guides available from the State, Court, and County Law Libraries section of the American Association of Law Libraries.

When trash is not considered “abandoned” and it is still considered the private property of the trash can or dumpster owner then, obviously, taking all or part of that private property is theft. In some municipalities and states, there are specific theft laws punishing dumpster diving. Even if those laws don’t exist in a particular place, generic theft laws can be used against people who take someone else’s property whether it was in the house, in the yard, in his hands, in a trash container or anywhere else.

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