THE CANADIAN PRESS — BRACEBRIDGE, Ont. – Lawyers for a man charged after not wearing clothes at a drive-thru in central Ontario will try to convince an Ontario court judge Tuesday that it should no longer be a criminal offence to be nude in public.
Brian Coldin is on trial after being nude at an A&W and a Tim Hortons in Bracebridge, where he pretended to reach into his non-existent back pocket for his wallet.
His lawyers will argue the nudity laws under which he was charged are too broad and therefore unconstitutional.
“The purpose of the criminal law is to protect us from harm, not to protect the sensibilities of the most prudish among us,” Nader Hasan, one of Coldin’s lawyers, said in an interview.
“These laws violate freedom of expression and they are overbroad such as to punish all kinds of conduct that is completely harmless and shouldn’t be criminal.”
READ THE WHOLE STORY HERE!