2021 New York Laws
CPL - Criminal Procedure
Part 3 - Special Proceedings and Miscellaneous Procedures
Title P - Procedures for Securing Attendance at Criminal Actions and Proceedings of Defendants and Witnesses Under Control of Court--Recognizance, Bail
Article 500 - Recognizance, Bail and Commitment--Definitions of Terms
500.10 - Recognizance, Bail and Commitment; Definitions of Terms.

Universal Citation: NY Crim Pro L § 500.10 (2021)
§ 500.10 Recognizance, bail and commitment; definitions of terms.
  As  used  in  this title, and in this chapter generally, the following
terms have the following meanings:
  1. "Principal" means a defendant in a criminal action  or  proceeding,
or  a person adjudged a material witness therein, or any other person so
involved therein that the principal may by law be  compelled  to  appear
before  a  court  for  the purpose of having such court exercise control
over the principal's person to secure the principal's future  attendance
at  the  action  or  proceeding when required, and who in fact either is
before the court for such  purpose  or  has  been  before  it  and  been
subjected to such control.
  2.  "Release on own recognizance." A court releases a principal on the
principal's own recognizance when,  having  acquired  control  over  the
principal's person, it permits the principal to be at liberty during the
pendency  of  the  criminal action or proceeding involved upon condition
that  the  principal  will  appear  thereat  whenever  the   principal's
attendance  may  be  required and will at all times render the principal
amenable to the orders and processes of the court.
  3. "Fix bail." A court fixes bail when, having acquired  control  over
the  person  of a principal, it designates a sum of money and stipulates
that, if bail in such amount is posted on behalf of  the  principal  and
approved, it will permit him to be at liberty during the pendency of the
criminal action or proceeding involved.
  3-a.  "Release  under  non-monetary  conditions."  A  court releases a
principal under non-monetary conditions when,  having  acquired  control
over  a  person,  it  authorizes  the person to be at liberty during the
pendency of the criminal action or proceeding involved under  conditions
ordered  by  the  court, which shall be the least restrictive conditions
that  will  reasonably  assure  the  principal's  return  to  court  and
reasonably  assure  the  principal's compliance with court conditions. A
principal shall not be required to pay for  any  part  of  the  cost  of
release  on  non-monetary conditions. Such conditions may include, among
other conditions reasonable under the circumstances:

(a) that the principal be in contact with a pretrial services agency serving principals in that county;

(b) that the principal abide by reasonable, specified restrictions on travel that are reasonably related to an actual risk of flight from the jurisdiction, or that the principal surrender his or her passport;

(c) that the principal refrain from possessing a firearm, destructive device or other dangerous weapon;

(d) that, when it is shown pursuant to subdivision four of section 510.45 of this title that no other realistic non-monetary condition or set of non-monetary conditions will suffice to reasonably assure the person's return to court, the person be placed in reasonable pretrial supervision with a pretrial services agency serving principals in that county;

(e) that the principal refrain from associating with certain persons who are connected with the instant charge, including, when appropriate, specified victims, witnesses, or co-defendants;

(f) that the principal be referred to a pretrial services agency for placement in mandatory programming, including counseling, treatment, and intimate partner violence intervention programs. Where applicable, the court may direct the principal be removed to a hospital pursuant to section 9.43 of the mental hygiene law;

(g) that the principal make diligent efforts to maintain employment, housing, or enrollment in school or educational programming;

(h) that the principal obey an order of protection issued by the court, including an order issued pursuant to section 530.11 of this title;

(i) that the principal obey conditions set by the court addressed to the safety of a victim of a family offense as defined in section 530.11 of this title including conditions that may be requested by or on behalf of the victim; and

(j) that, when it is shown pursuant to paragraph (a) of subdivision four of section 510.40 of this title that no other realistic non-monetary condition or set of non-monetary conditions will suffice to reasonably assure the principal's return to court, the principal's location be monitored with an approved electronic monitoring device, in accordance with such subdivision four of section 510.40 of this title. 3-b. Subdivision three-a of this section presents a non-exclusive list of conditions that may be considered and imposed by law, singularly or in combination, when reasonable under the circumstances of the defendant, the case, and the situation of the defendant. The court need not necessarily order one or more specific conditions first before ordering one or more or additional conditions. 4. "Commit to the custody of the sheriff." A court commits a principal to the custody of the sheriff when, having acquired control over the principal's person, it orders that the principal be confined in the custody of the sheriff during the pendency of the criminal action or proceeding involved. 5. "Securing order" means an order of a court committing a principal to the custody of the sheriff or fixing bail, where authorized, or releasing the principal on the principal's own recognizance or releasing the principal under non-monetary conditions. 6. "Order of recognizance or bail" means a securing order releasing a principal on the principal's own recognizance or under non-monetary conditions or, where authorized, fixing bail. 7. "Application for recognizance or bail" means an application by a principal that the court, instead of committing the principal to or retaining the principal in the custody of the sheriff, either release the principal on the principal's own recognizance, release under non-monetary conditions, or, where authorized, fix bail. 8. "Post bail" means to deposit bail in the amount and form fixed by the court, with the court or with some other authorized public servant or agency. 9. "Bail" means cash bail, a bail bond or money paid with a credit card. 10. "Cash bail" means a sum of money, in the amount designated in an order fixing bail, posted by a principal or by another person on his behalf with a court or other authorized public servant or agency, upon the condition that such money will become forfeit to the people of the state of New York if the principal does not comply with the directions of a court requiring his attendance at the criminal action or proceeding involved or does not otherwise render himself amenable to the orders and processes of the court. 11. "Obligor" means a person who executes a bail bond on behalf of a principal and thereby assumes the undertaking described therein. The principal himself may be an obligor. 12. "Surety" means an obligor who is not a principal. 13. "Bail bond" means a written undertaking, executed by one or more obligors, that the principal designated in such instrument will, while at liberty as a result of an order fixing bail and of the posting of the bail bond in satisfaction thereof, appear in a designated criminal action or proceeding when his attendance is required and otherwise render himself amenable to the orders and processes of the court, and that in the event that he fails to do so the obligor or obligors will pay to the people of the state of New York a specified sum of money, in the amount designated in the order fixing bail. 14. "Appearance bond" means a bail bond in which the only obligor is the principal. 15. "Surety bond" means a bail bond in which the obligor or obligors consist of one or more sureties or of one or more sureties and the principal. 16. "Insurance company bail bond" means a surety bond, executed in the form prescribed by the superintendent of financial services, in which the surety-obligor is a corporation licensed by the superintendent of financial services to engage in the business of executing bail bonds. 17. "Secured bail bond" means a bail bond secured by either:

(a) Personal property which is not exempt from execution and which, over and above all liabilities and encumbrances, has a value equal to or greater than the total amount of the undertaking; or

(b) Real property having a value of at least twice the total amount of the undertaking. For purposes of this paragraph, value of real property is determined by either:

(i) dividing the last assessed value of such property by the last given equalization rate or in a special assessing unit, as defined in article eighteen of the real property tax law, the appropriate class ratio established pursuant to section twelve hundred two of such law of the assessing municipality wherein the property is situated and by deducting from the resulting figure the total amount of any liens or other encumbrances upon such property; or

(ii) the value of the property as indicated in a certified appraisal report submitted by a state certified general real estate appraiser duly licensed by the department of state as provided in section one hundred sixty-j of the executive law, and by deducting from the appraised value the total amount of any liens or other encumbrances upon such property. A lien report issued by a title insurance company licensed under article sixty-four of the insurance law, that guarantees the correctness of a lien search conducted by it, shall be presumptive proof of liens upon the property. 18. "Partially secured bail bond" means a bail bond secured only by a deposit of a sum of money not exceeding ten percent of the total amount of the undertaking. 19. "Unsecured bail bond" means a bail bond, other than an insurance company bail bond, not secured by any deposit of or lien upon property. 20. "Court" includes, where appropriate, a judge authorized to act as described in a particular statute, though not as a court. 21. "Qualifies for electronic monitoring," for purposes of subdivision four of section 510.40 of this title, means a person charged with a felony, a misdemeanor crime of domestic violence, a misdemeanor defined in article one hundred thirty of the penal law, a crime and the circumstances of paragraph (b) of subdivision two of section 530.60 of this title apply, or any misdemeanor where the defendant stands previously convicted, within the past five years, of a violent felony offense as defined in section 70.02 of the penal law. For the purposes of this subdivision, in calculating such five year period, any period of time during which the defendant was incarcerated for any reason between the time of the commission of any such previous crime and the time of commission of the present crime shall be excluded and such five year period shall be extended by a period or periods equal to the time served under such incarceration. 22. "Misdemeanor crime of domestic violence," for purposes of subdivision twenty-one of this section, means a misdemeanor under the penal law provisions and circumstances described in subdivision one of section 530.11 of this title.

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