2020 New York Laws
CPL - Criminal Procedure
Part 2 - The Principal Proceedings
Title H - Preliminary Proceedings in Local Criminal Court
Article 170 - Proceedings Upon Information, Simplified Traffic Information, Prosecutor's Information and Misdemeanor Complaint From Arraignment to Plea
170.15 - Removal of Action From One Local Criminal Court to Another.

Universal Citation: NY Crim Pro L § 170.15 (2020)
§ 170.15  Removal of action from one local criminal court to another.
  Under  circumstances  prescribed  in  this  section, a criminal action
based upon an information,  a  simplified  information,  a  prosecutor's
information  or  a  misdemeanor  complaint may be removed from one local
criminal court to another:
  1.  When a defendant arrested by a police officer for an offense other
than a felony, allegedly committed in a city  or  town,  has,  owing  to
special  circumstances  and pursuant to law, not been brought before the
particular local criminal court which by reason of  the  situs  of  such
offense  has  trial  jurisdiction  thereof, but, instead, before a local
criminal court which does  not  have  trial  jurisdiction  thereof,  and
therein  stands  charged  with  such  offense by information, simplified
information or misdemeanor complaint, such  local  criminal  court  must
arraign  him  upon such accusatory instrument.  If the defendant desires
to  enter  a  plea  of  guilty  thereto   immediately   following   such
arraignment, such local criminal court must permit him to do so and must
thereafter conduct the action to judgment.  Otherwise, it must remit the
action,  together  with all pertinent papers and documents, to the local
criminal court which has trial  jurisdiction  of  the  action,  and  the
latter  court  must  then conduct such action to judgment or other final
disposition.
  2.  When a defendant arrested by a police officer for an offense other
than a felony has been brought before a superior court judge sitting  as
a  local  criminal court for arraignment upon an information, simplified
information or misdemeanor complaint charging such offense,  such  judge
must,  as  a  local  criminal  court,  arraign  the  defendant upon such
accusatory instrument.  Such judge must then remit the action,  together
with  all  pertinent  papers  and  documents,  to a local criminal court
having trial jurisdiction thereof.  The latter court must  then  conduct
such action to judgment or other final disposition.
  3.   At any time within the period provided by section 255.20, where a
defendant is arraigned upon an information, a simplified information,  a
prosecutor's  information  or  a misdemeanor complaint pending in a city
court, town court or a village court having trial jurisdiction  thereof,
a judge of the county court of the county in which such city court, town
court  or  village court is located may, upon motion of the defendant or
the people, order that the action be transferred  for  disposition  from
the  court  in  which  the matter is pending to another designated local
criminal court of the county, upon the ground that  disposition  thereof
within  a  reasonable  time in the court from which removal is sought is
unlikely owing to:

(a) Death, disability or other incapacity or disqualification of all of the judges of such court; or

(b) Inability of such court to form a jury in a case, in which the defendant is entitled to and has requested a jury trial. 4. Notwithstanding any provision of this section to the contrary, in any county outside a city having a population of one million or more, upon or after arraignment of a defendant on an information, a simplified information, a prosecutor's information or a misdemeanor complaint pending in a local criminal court, such court may, upon motion of the defendant and after giving the district attorney an opportunity to be heard, order that the action be removed from the court in which the matter is pending to another local criminal court in the same county which has been designated a court formed to address a matter of special concern based upon the status of the defendant or the victim, commonly known as a "problem solving court," including, but not limited to, drug court, domestic violence court, youth court, mental health court, and veterans court, by the chief administrator of the courts, and such problem solving court may then conduct such action to judgment or other final disposition; provided, however, that an order of removal issued under this subdivision shall not take effect until five days after the date the order is issued unless, prior to such effective date, the problem solving court notifies the court that issued the order that:

(a) it will not accept the action, in which event the order shall not take effect, or

(b) it will accept the action on a date prior to such effective date, in which event the order shall take effect upon such prior date. Upon providing notification pursuant to paragraph (a) or (b) of this subdivision, the problem solving court shall promptly give notice to the defendant, his or her counsel and the district attorney. 5. (a) Notwithstanding any provision of this section to the contrary, in any county outside a city having a population of one million or more, upon or after arraignment of a defendant on an information, a simplified information, a prosecutor's information or a misdemeanor complaint pending in a local criminal court, such court may, upon motion of the defendant and after giving the district attorney an opportunity to be heard, order that the action be removed from the court in which the matter is pending to another local criminal court in the same county, or with consent of the district attorney to another court in an adjoining county, that has been designated as a human trafficking court by the chief administrator of the courts, and such human trafficking court may then conduct such action to judgement or other final deposition; provided, however, that an order of removal issued under this subdivision shall not take effect until five days after the date the order is issued unless, prior to such effective date, the human trafficking court notifies the court that issued the order that: i. it will not accept the action, in which event the order shall not take effect; or ii. it will accept the action on a date prior to such effective date, in which event the order shall take effect upon such prior date.

(b) Upon providing notification pursuant to subparagraph i or ii of paragraph (a) of this subdivision, the human trafficking court shall promptly give notice to the defendant, his or her counsel, and the district attorney.

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