FROM: HOLLEY CARNRIGHT
DATE: OCTOBER 7, 2019
RE: PRESS
RELEASE – BAIL “REFORM” BILL
Bail “Reform” Bill
I have
received a number of inquiries regarding the bail “reform” law which will take
effect January 1, 2020. The questions I have received run along these lines, .
. . Is it true that in January a person charged with (such and such a crime)
will be released without bail? What if the individual has a prior criminal
history? Are victims’ concerns taken into account? What about the risk that the
individual will commit a crime while being released pending their court
appearance?
Effective in
January, defendants charged with, among other things, residential burglary,
almost all drug sale and possession offenses, some homicides, assaults
resulting from drunk driving collisions, many weapons offenses, grand larceny,
bribery involving public officials, and many charges involving child
pornography, among other charges, will all be released from custody, without the
court even being able to consider bail. Their release will turn only on the
type of charge, without any consideration of the defendant’s previous criminal
record, his previous record of making court appearances, or his likelihood of
committing further crimes while out of custody.
A
non-exhaustive list of charges for which a defendant must be released from
custody, without bail, after January 1, 2020, includes:
·
Burglary
in the second degree (residential burglary)
·
Burglary
in the third degree
·
Robbery
in the second degree (aided by another person)
·
Robbery
in the third degree
·
Manslaughter
in the second degree
·
Criminally
negligent homicide
·
Aggravated
vehicular homicide
·
Vehicular
manslaughter in the first and second degrees
·
Assault
in the third degree
·
Aggravated
vehicular assault
·
Aggravated
assault upon a person less than eleven years old
·
Vehicular
assault in the first and second degrees
·
Criminal
possession of a weapon on school grounds
·
Criminal
possession of a firearm
·
Criminal
possession of a weapon in the fourth degree
·
Criminal
sale of a firearm to a minor
·
Criminal
possession of a controlled substance in the first and second degrees
·
Criminal
sale of a controlled substance in the first and second degrees
·
Criminal
sale of a controlled substance in or near school grounds
·
Use
of a child to commit a controlled substance offense
·
Criminal
sale of a controlled substance to a child
·
Patronizing
a person for prostitution in a school zone
·
Promoting
an obscene sexual performance by a child
·
Possessing
an obscene sexual performance by a child
·
Promoting
a sexual performance by a child
·
Failure
to register as a sex offender
·
Bribery
in the first degree
·
Bribe
giving for public office
·
Bribe
receiving in the first degree
·
Unlawful
imprisonment in the first degree
·
Coercion
in the first degree
·
Arson
in the third and fourth degrees
·
Grand
larceny in the first, second, third, and fourth degrees
·
Aggravated
cruelty to animals, overdriving, torturing and injuring animals
·
Failure
to provide proper sustenance to animals
·
Animal
fighting
·
Criminal
solicitation in the first degree
·
Criminal
facilitation in the first degree
·
Money
laundering in support of terrorism in the third and fourth degrees
·
Obstructing
governmental administration in the first and second degree
·
Obstructing
governmental administration by means of a self-defense spray device
·
Promoting
prison contraband in the first and second degrees
·
Resisting
arrest
·
Hindering
prosecution
·
Tampering
with a juror
·
Tampering
with physical evidence
·
Aggravated
harassment in the first degree
·
Directing
a laser at an aircraft in the first degree
·
Enterprise
corruption
·
Money
laundering in the first degree
Let me offer
an illustration of the effect this bail “reform” Bill will have. In April in
one of the largest drug seizure cases I have prosecuted, two men with NY City
addresses were arrested in Ulster County for possession with intent to sell 20
ounces of cocaine and 14 ounces of fentanyl laced heroin. One of the individuals
has two felony convictions for drug sales for which he served state prison
sentences. On the first conviction he was released to parole, revoked parole,
and reoffended. The second individual has two prior violent felony convictions.
He also has served two state prison sentences, has been released to parole, and
has violated parole. They each face substantial state prison sentences on the charges
pending here and have been remanded to jail. On January 1, when the new law
takes effect, they will be released without bail.