Article from: www.thenewspaper.com/news/03/354.asp
Berkeley, California, a city that prides itself on protesting and free speech, is asking whether a motorist's right to honk his horn at a protest is more important than the right of nearby residents to sleep at night. The city police issued $5700 worth of "unreasonable use of horn" citations to around 40 motorists who honked in support of a hotel-workers union at a late-night protest outside the Claremont Hotel August 27 last year.The case is not cut and dried, said Jesse H. Choper, a constitutional law professor at Boalt Hall. "Does the interest in having privacy and quiet at 11:45 p.m. overcome her First Amendment interest? It's a close call."Source: Ticketed Motorist Claims Rights Violation for Honking at Protest (Berkeley Daily Planet, 4/22/2005)