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Kyla on Vancouver is Awesome: Is Vancouver’s massive naked bike ride technically illegal? A lawyer weighs in

Kyla on Vancouver is Awesome: Is Vancouver’s massive naked bike ride technically illegal? A lawyer weighs in

Some locals may have been caught off guard by a horde of nude cyclists riding through the city’s West End and downtown over the weekend. 

The World Naked Bike Race, which originated in Vancouver and has since spread to other global cities like Portland, London, and Amsterdam, is positioned as a protest targeting fossil fuels, body images, and war. It takes place every summer; this year’s Vancouver ride was on July 8.

While it is a criminal offence to be naked in public, that only counts when a person’s genitals are exposed, especially in places where there might be children or vulnerable people, according to local criminal lawyer Kyla Lee. 

Being topless, on the other hand, isn’t considered a criminal offence. “It used to be that women who went topless would be prosecuted for indecent exposure, but then people starting saying ‘Hold on, that’s discriminatory because men can be topless,'” explains Lee. 

After some back and forth on the issue, the law settled on not prosecuting either men or women for being topless in public. “Unless you’re doing something beyond just being topless, like making obscene gestures,” clarifies Lee.

“Riding your bike topless as a woman would not be unlawful.”

Read the full story here.

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