A state-specific breakdown of how criminal cases work in New York, including the deadlines and court structure that apply.
Criminal charges in New York move through Supreme Court, and the procedural rules that govern discovery, plea timing, and trial rights are set by the New York Supreme Court.
Felony and misdemeanor classifications carry different exposure and different court tracks in most states, New York included — confirming which category a charge falls into early shapes every decision that follows, from bail arguments to plea strategy.
Courts in the Northeast region tend to have denser dockets in metro counties, which can extend timelines for contested matters. Expungement or record-sealing eligibility after a case resolves also varies by offense type and outcome, and is worth evaluating even years after a conviction.
New York law can change, and every case has its own facts. Use this as a starting point, then confirm specifics with a licensed attorney in New York.
Statements made before an attorney is present are frequently the most damaging evidence in a case — exercising this right immediately is rarely a mistake.
This is where formal charges are read and an initial plea is entered, typically not guilty, preserving all options. In New York, arraignment happens in Supreme Court under the New York Supreme Court.
The defense is entitled to see the prosecution's evidence, which shapes whether a plea, motion to suppress, or trial is the stronger path.
The large majority of criminal cases resolve through negotiated pleas rather than trial, but that decision should follow — not precede — a full case evaluation.
Many states allow certain records to be sealed or expunged after a waiting period, subject to the type of offense and outcome.
Constitutional protections against self-incrimination exist precisely because early statements, even innocent ones, are commonly used against defendants later in a case.
Felonies generally carry the possibility of over a year in state prison and long-term consequences like loss of certain rights; misdemeanors are generally punishable by county jail time of a year or less and carry fewer collateral consequences.
Eligibility depends heavily on the state, the offense, and the case outcome — many states allow expungement or sealing for lower-level offenses after a waiting period with no new arrests.
Criminal charges in New York are handled by Supreme Court, operating under the New York Supreme Court. Case procedure, from arraignment through plea or trial, follows that court's local rules.