Flipping off a cop in New Jersey is not illegal—it’s protected speech under the First Amendment.
First Amendment Protection
Federal courts, including cases like Nichols v. Chater (6th Cir.) and similar rulings, consistently hold that the middle finger gesture toward police qualifies as expressive conduct. New Jersey follows this, as no state statute criminalizes it outright, overriding any vague “gesture of contempt” language in disorderly conduct laws (N.J.S.A. 2C:33-2).
Simply put, it’s rude but your constitutional right, even from a car during a stop.
Potential Escalation Risks
While legal, the gesture can prompt pretextual stops for “obscenity” or “disorderly conduct,” which courts later dismiss for lacking probable cause. Officers need articulable facts for a traffic stop—flipping alone doesn’t qualify, per Whren v. United States limits.
If paired with threats, yelling, or impeding (e.g., slowing traffic), charges like terroristic threats (N.J.S.A. 2C:12-3) or obstruction apply, escalating to arrests.
Local Enforcement
Urban areas like Newark or Jersey City see more scrutiny, but successful lawsuits (e.g., via ACLU-NJ) affirm rights. Rural stops might lead to warnings over citations, as judges reject “offended officer” claims.
No license suspensions or fines stick solely for the gesture.
Practical Advice
- During a stop: Politely refuse searches; record if safe. Gesture post-interaction to avoid escalation.
- On foot: Same protections, but de-escalate if approached.
- Document: Note badge numbers; sue for unlawful detention via §1983 claims if targeted.
It’s protected, but unwise—cops retain wide discretion short-term.
Key Scenarios Table
Exercise rights wisely; courts back you, but streets don’t always.
SOURCES:
- https://943thepoint.com/can-i-legally-get-pulled-over-for-flipping-off-a-cop-in-new-jersey/
- https://nj1015.com/smile-is-frowning-at-a-cop-really-illegal-in-nj/












