Public.Law logo NewYork.Public.Law
  • Laws of New York
  • Remove ads
  • Login
  1. Home
  2. Laws
  3. Crim. Proc. Law
  4. Part 2
  5. Title H
  6. Art. 100

Article 100
Commencement of Action In Local Criminal Court or Youth Part of a Superior Court--accusatory Instruments

Sections

100.05
Commencement of action
100.07
Commencement of action
100.10
Local criminal court and youth part of the superior court accusatory instruments
100.15
Information, misdemeanor complaint and felony complaint
100.20
Supporting deposition
100.25
Simplified information
100.30
Information, misdemeanor complaint, felony complaint, supporting deposition and proof of service of supporting deposition
100.35
Prosecutor's information
100.40
Local criminal court and youth part of the superior court accusatory instruments
100.45
Information, prosecutor's information, misdemeanor complaint
100.50
Superseding informations and prosecutor's informations
100.55
Local criminal court accusatory instruments
100.60
Youth part of the superior court accusatory instruments
 



Stay Connected

Join thousands of people who receive monthly site updates.

Subscribe

Instagram Facebook Twitter Our GitHub Page

Get Legal Help

The New York State Bar Association runs a service for finding an attorney in good standing. Initial consultations are usually free or discounted: Lawyer Referral Service

Committed to Public Service

We will always provide free access to the current law. In addition, we provide special support for non-profit, educational, and government users. Through social entre­pre­neurship, we’re lowering the cost of legal services and increasing citizen access.

Navigate

  • Find a Lawyer
  • Blog
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Reports
  • Secondary Sources
California: Codes
Colorado: C.R.S.
Nevada: NRS
New York: Laws
Oregon: OAR, ORS
Texas: Statutes
World: Rome Statute, International Dictionary

Location: https://newyork.public.law/laws/n.y._criminal_procedure_law_part_2_title_h_article_100

Blank Outline Levels

The legislature occasionally skips outline levels. For example:

(3) A person may apply [...]
(4)(a) A person petitioning for relief [...]

In this example, (3), (4), and (4)(a) are all outline levels, but (4) was omitted by its authors. It's only implied. This presents an interesting challenge when laying out the text. We've decided to display a blank section with this note, in order to aide readability.

Trust but verify.

Do you have an opinion about this solution? Drop us a line.