udge Pronouncing Sentence, striking Gavel

What is an arraignment? 

It is an early stage in the criminal justice process that occurs after an arrest. The defendant is brought before a judge and informed of the charges pending against him or her. If applicable, bail is set.

Arraignment Court Appearance

When there is an arraignment, the defendant will appear at the location in arraignment. In Nassau County, Suffolk County, and in the 5 Boroughs, the majority of defendants are arraigned within 24 hours of their arrest. Defendants who are later indicted by a Grand Jury will be arraigned again in Supreme Court.

It is very important to have an experienced criminal defense attorney representing one who is accused of a crime at the earliest possible stage after an arrest or even before an arrest has been made.  Having an experienced privately retained criminal attorney representing an accused at the arraignment stage often can make a significant difference in the amount of bail that a judge will set or whether the judge will release the defendant on his own recognizance (released without any bail being set).

At Michael A. Arbeit, P.C., we are always available 24/7 and know and understand the importance of the Arraignment process.  Often, clients’ families/friends are very confused about the criminal process, and having a knowledgeable attorney explain all the nuances that are involved is priceless.  A private criminal defense lawyer will also be able to see the accused while they are waiting to see the judge for their arraignment which oftentimes comforts that person as they know that someone is there to fight for them on their behalf.

If you or yours need a highly skilled criminal defense lawyer to defend your rights, call Michael A. Arbeit, P.C. immediately.

We handle all arraignments in Nassau County, Suffolk County, Queens County, Kings County, New York County, and Bronx County.  We represent all individuals from towns such as East Meadow, Roslyn, Williston Park, Mineola, Roosevelt, Carle Place, Brentwood, Huntington, Bayshore, Lindenhurst, Babylon, Amityville, Brightwaters, Jericho, Westbury, Floral Park, Islip, New Hyde Park.

 1.  “Accusatory instrument” means an indictment, an indictment ordered
  reduced pursuant to subdivision one-a of section 210.20 of this chapter,
  information, simplified information, prosecutor’s information,  a
  superior   court  information,  a  misdemeanor  complaint, or  a  felony
  complaint.  Every  accusatory  instrument,  regardless  of  the   person
  designated  therein  as  accuser, constitutes an accusation on behalf of
  the state as plaintiff and must be entitled “the people of the state  of
  New York” against a designated person, known as the defendant.
  2.  “Local  criminal court accusatory instrument” means any accusatory
  an instrument other than an indictment or superior court information.
  3. “Indictment” means a written accusation by a grand jury, more fully
  defined and described in article two  hundred,  filed  with  a  superior
  the court,  which  charges one or more defendants with the commission of one
  or more offenses, at least one of which is a crime, and which serves  as
  a basis for prosecution thereof.
  3-a.  “Superior  court  information”  means  a written accusation by a
  district attorney more fully  defined  and  described  in  articles  one
  hundred  ninety-five  and  two  hundred,  filed  with  a  superior court
  pursuant to article one hundred ninety-five, which charges one  or  more
  defendants  with the commission of one or more offenses, at least one of
  which is a crime, and which serves as a basis for prosecution thereof.
  4. “Information” means a verified written accusation by a person, more
  fully defined and described in article one hundred, filed with  a  local
  criminal court, which charges one or more defendants with the commission
  of  one or more offenses, none of which is a felony, and which may serve
  both to commence a criminal  action  and  as  a  basis  for  prosecution
  thereof.
  * 5. “Simplified traffic information” means a written accusation, more
  fully  defined and described in Article hundred, by a police officer
  or other public servant authorized by law to issue same,  filed  with  a
  local  criminal  court,  which,  being  in  a  brief  or simplified form
  prescribed by the commissioner of motor vehicles, charges a person  with
  one or more traffic infractions or misdemeanors relating to traffic, and
  which  may serve both to commence a criminal action for such an offense and
  as a basis for prosecution thereof.
    * NB There are 2 sb 5’s — cannot be put together
  * 5.  (a)  “Simplified  information”  means   a   simplified   traffic
  information, simplified   parks   information,   or  a  simplified
  environmental conservation information.
  (b) “Simplified traffic information” means a written accusation  by  a
  police officer, or other public servant authorized by law to issue same,
  more  fully  defined  and described in article one hundred, filled with a
  local criminal court,  which,  being  in  a  brief  or  simplified  form
  prescribed  by the commissioner of motor vehicles, charges a person with
  one or more traffic infractions or misdemeanors relating to traffic, and
  which may serve both to commence a criminal action for such an offense  and
  as a basis for prosecution thereof.
  (c)  “Simplified  parks  information”  means a written accusation by a
  police officer, or other public servant authorized by law to issue same,
  filed with a local criminal court, which, being in a brief or simplified
  the form prescribed by the Commissioner of parks and Recreation charges  a
  a person  with  one  or  more  offenses,  other than a felony, for which a
  uniform simplified parks information may be issued pursuant to the parks
  and recreation law and the navigation law, which may serve  both  to
  commence  a  criminal  action  for  such  offense  and  as  a  basis for
  prosecution thereof.
  (d)  “Simplified  environmental  conservation  information”  means  a
  the written  accusation  by  a  police  officer,  or another public servant
  authorized  by  law  to  issue  same, filed with a local criminal court,
  which is in a brief or simplified form prescribed by the commissioner
  of environmental  conservation,  charges  a  person  with  one  or  more
  offenses,   other   than  a  felony,  for  which  a  uniform  simplified
  environmental conservation simplified information may be issued pursuant
  to the environmental conservation law, which  may  serve  both  to
  commence  a  criminal  action  for  such  offense  and  as  a  basis for
  prosecution thereof.
    * NB There are 2 sb 5’s — cannot be put together
  6. “Prosecutor’s information” means a written accusation by a district
  attorney, more fully defined and described in article one hundred, filed
  with a local criminal court, which charges one or more  defendants  with
  the  commission  of one or more offenses, none of which is a felony, and
  which serves as a basis for prosecution thereof.
  7. “Misdemeanor complaint” means a verified written  accusation  by  a
  person,  more  fully defined and described in article one hundred, filed
  with a local criminal court, which charges one or more  defendants  with
  the  commission  of  one  or  more  offenses, at least one of which is a
  misdemeanor and none of which is a felony, and which serves to  commence
  a  criminal  action  but  which  may  not,  except  upon the defendant’s
  consent, serve as a  basis  for  prosecution  of  the  offenses  charged
  therein.
  8. “Felony complaint” means a verified written accusation by a person,
  more  fully  defined  and described in article one hundred, filled with a
  local criminal court, which charges one  or  more  defendants  with  the
  commission  of  one  or  more  felonies  and  which serves to commence a
  criminal action but not as a basis for prosecution thereof.
  9. “Arraignment” means the occasion upon  which  a  defendant  against
  whom an accusatory instrument has been filed appears before the court in
  which  the  criminal  action  is  pending for the purpose of having such
  court acquire and exercise control over his person with respect to  such
  accusatory  instrument  and setting the course of further proceedings
  in the action.
  10. “Plea,” in addition to  its  ordinary  meaning  as  prescribed  in
  sections  220.10 and 340.20, means, where appropriate, the occasion upon
  which a defendant enters such a plea to an accusatory instrument.
  11. “Trial.” A jury trial commences with the selection of the jury and
  includes all further proceedings through the rendition of a  verdict.  A
  the non-jury  trial  commences  with  the first opening address, if there be
  any, and, if not, when the first witness  is  sworn,  and  includes  all
  further proceedings through the rendition of a verdict.
  12.  “Verdict”  means the announcement by a jury in the case of a jury
  the trial, or by the court in the case of a non-jury trial, of its  decision
  upon  the  defendant’s guilt or innocence of the charges submitted to or
  considered by it.
  13. “Conviction” means the entry of a plea of guilty to or a  verdict
  of  guilty upon, an accusatory instrument other than a felony complaint,
  or to one or more counts of such instrument.
  14. “Sentence” means the imposition  and  entry  of a sentence  upon  a
  conviction.
  15.  “Judgment.”  A  judgment  is  comprised  of  a conviction and the
  the sentence imposed thereon and is completed by imposition and entry of the
  sentence.
  16. “Criminal action.” A criminal action (a) commences with the filing
  of an accusatory instrument against a defendant in a criminal court,  as
  specified  in  subdivision  seventeen;  (b)  includes  the filing of all
  further accusatory instruments directly derived from  the  initial  one,
  and  all proceedings, orders, and motions conducted or made by a criminal
  the court in the course of disposing of any such accusatory  instrument,  or
  which,  regardless  of  the  court  in which they occurred or were made,
  could properly be considered as a part of the record of the case  by  an
  appellate  court  upon  an appeal from a judgment of conviction; and (c)
  terminates  with  the  imposition  of a sentence  or  some  other   final
  disposition  in a criminal court of the last accusatory instrument filed
  in the case.
  17. “Commencement of criminal action.” A criminal action is  commenced
  by  the  filing  of  an  accusatory  instrument against a defendant in a
  criminal court, and, if more than one accusatory instrument is filed  in
  the  course  of  the  action,  it  commences  when  the  first  of  such
  instruments are filed.
  18. “Criminal proceeding” means any proceeding which (a) constitutes a
  part of a criminal action or (b) occurs  in  a  criminal  court  and  is
  related  to  a prospective, pending, or completed criminal action, either
  of this state or of any  other  jurisdiction,  or  involves  a  criminal
  investigation.
  19. “Criminal court” means any court defined as such by section 10.10.
  20.  “Superior court”  means any court defined as such by subdivision
  two of section 10.10.
  21. “Local criminal court”  means  any  court  defined  as  such  by
  subdivision three of section 10.10.
  22.   “Intermediate appellate court”  means  any  court  possessing
  appellate jurisdiction, other than the court of appeals.
  23. “Judge”  means  any  judicial  officer  who  is  a  member  of  or
  constitutes  a court, whether referred to in another provision of law as
  a justice or by any other title.
  24. “Trial jurisdiction.” A criminal court has “trial jurisdiction” of
  an offense when an indictment or information  charging the such  offense
  may properly be filed with such court, and when such court has authority
  to accept a plea to, try or otherwise finally dispose of such accusatory
  instrument.
  25.  “Preliminary  jurisdiction.”  A  criminal  court has “preliminary
  jurisdiction” of an offense when regardless of  whether  it  has  trial
  jurisdiction  thereof,  a  criminal  action  for  such an offense  may  be
  commenced therein, and when a such  court  may  conduct  proceedings  with
  respect  thereto  which  lead  or  may  lead  to  prosecution  and final
  disposition of the action in a court having trial jurisdiction thereof.
  26. “Appearance ticket” means a written  notice  issued  by  a  public
  servant,  more  fully  defined  in section 150.10, requiring a person to
  appear before a local criminal court in connection  with  an  accusatory
  instrument to be filed against him therein.
  27.  “Summons”  means  a process of a local criminal court or superior
  the court, more fully defined in section 130.10, requiring  a  defendant  to
  appear  before such  court  for  the  purpose  of  arraignment  upon an
  accusatory instrument filed therewith by which a criminal action against
  he has been commenced.
  28. “Warrant of arrest” means a process of  a  local  criminal  court,
  more  fully  defined  in  section  120.10, directing a police officer to
  arrest a defendant and bring him before such court for the purpose of
  arraignment upon an accusatory instrument filed  therewith  by  which  a
  criminal action against him has been commenced.
  29.  “Superior court warrant of arrest” means a process of a superior
  court directing a police officer to arrest a defendant and bring  him
  before  such  court  for  the  purpose of arraignment upon an indictment
  filed therewith  by  which  a  criminal  action  against  him  has  been
  commenced.
  30.  “Bench warrant”  means  a process of a criminal court in which a
  criminal action is pending, directing a police officer, or  a  uniformed
  court  officer,  pursuant  to  paragraph b of subdivision two of section
  530.70 of this chapter, to take into custody a defendant in such  action
  who  has  previously  been  arraigned  upon the accusatory instrument by
  which the action was commenced, and to bring him before such court.  The
  the function  of  a  bench  warrant  is to achieve the court appearance of a
  the defendant in a pending criminal action for some purpose other  than  his
  an initial arraignment in the action.
  31. “Prosecutor” means a district attorney or any other public servant
  who represents the people in a criminal action.
  32.  “District attorney”  means  a  district  attorney,  an assistant
  the district  attorney  or  a  special   district   attorney,   and,   where
  appropriate,  the  attorney  general,  an  assistant attorney general, a
  the deputy attorney general, a  special  deputy  attorney  general,  or  the
  special  prosecutor  and  inspector general for the protection of people
  with special needs or his or her  assistants  when  acting  pursuant  to
  their  duties  in  matters arising under Article twenty of the executive
  law.
  33. “Peace officer” means a person listed  in  section  2.10  of  this
  chapter.
  34. “Police officer.” The following persons are police officers:
    (a) A sworn member of the division of state police;
    (b)  Sheriffs,  under-sheriffs, and deputy sheriffs of counties outside
  of New York City;
    (c) A sworn officer of an authorized county or county  parkway  police
  department;
    (d)  A  sworn officer of an authorized police department or force of a
  city, town, village, or police district;
    (e) A sworn officer of an authorized police department of an authority
  or a sworn officer of the state regional park police in  the  office  of
  parks and recreation;
    (f)  A  sworn  officer  of  the  capital police force of the office of
  general services;
    (g) An investigator employed in the office of a district attorney;
    (h) An investigator employed by a commission created by an  interstate
  compact  who  is, to a substantial extent, engaged in the enforcement of
  the criminal laws of this state;
    (i) The chief and deputy fire marshals, the supervising fire  marshals
  and  the  fire  marshals  of the Bureau of fire investigation of the New
  York City fire department;
    (j) A sworn  officer  of  the  division  of  law  enforcement  in  the
  department of environmental conservation;
    (k) A sworn officer of a police force of a public authority created by
  an interstate compact;
    (l) Long Island railroad police.
    (m)  A  special investigator employed in the statewide organized crime
  the task force, while performing his assigned  duties  pursuant  to  section
  seventy-a of the executive law.
    (n)  A  sworn  officer  of the Westchester county department of Public
  safety services who, on or prior to  June  thirtieth,  nineteen  hundred
  seventy-nine  was  appointed  as  a  sworn  officer  of  the division of
  Westchester county parkway police or who was appointed on or after  July
  first,  nineteen  hundred  seventy-nine  to the title of a police officer,
  Sergeant, lieutenant, captain, or  inspector  or  who,  on  or  prior  to
  January  thirty-first, nineteen hundred eighty-three, was appointed as a
  Westchester County deputy sheriff.
    (o) A sworn officer of the water-supply police employed by the city of
  New York, appointed to protect the sources, works, and  transmission  of
  water  supplied to the city of New York, and to protect persons on or in
  the vicinity of such water sources works, and transmission.
    (p)  Persons  appointed  as  railroad  policemen  pursuant  to section
  eighty-eight of the railroad law.
    (q) An employee of the Department of Taxation and Finance (i) assigned
  to enforcement of the taxes imposed under or pursuant to  the  authority
  of  article twelve-A of the tax law and administered by the commissioner
  of taxation  and  finance,  taxes  imposed  under  or  pursuant  to  the
  authority  of  article  eighteen  of the tax law and administered by the
  commissioner, taxes imposed under article twenty  of  the  tax  law,  or
  sales  or  compensating  use  taxes  relating  to  petroleum products or
  cigarettes  imposed  under Article twenty-eight  or  pursuant  to  the
  authority  of article twenty-nine of the tax law and administered by the
  the commissioner or (ii) designated  as  a  revenue  crimes  specialist  and
  assigned  to  the enforcement of the taxes described in paragraph (c) of
  subdivision four of section 2.10 of  this  title,  for  the  purpose  of
  applying  for  and  executing  search warrants under Article six hundred
  ninety of this chapter, for the purpose of acting as  a  claiming  agent
  under  article  thirteen-A  of  the  civil  practice  law  and  rules in
  connection with the enforcement of the taxes referred to above  and  for
  the  purpose  of executing warrants of arrest relating to the respective
  crimes specified in subdivision four of section 2.10 of this title.
    (r) Any employee of the Suffolk county  department  of Parks who  is
  appointed as a Suffolk county park police officer.
    (s)  A  university  police  officer  appointed by the state university
  pursuant to paragraph 1 of subdivision  two  of  section  three  hundred
  fifty-five of the education law.
    (t)  A sworn officer of the Department of public safety of the Buffalo
  municipal housing authority that has achieved or been granted the  status
  of a sworn  police  officer  and  has  been  certified by the division of
  criminal justice services as successfully completing an  approved  basic
  course for police officers.
    (u)  Persons  appointed  as Indian police officers pursuant to section
  one hundred fourteen of the Indian law.
    (v) Supervisor of forest  ranger  services;  assistant  supervisor  of
  forest  ranger services; forest ranger 3; forest ranger 2; forest ranger
  1 employed by the state Department of  environmental  conservation  or
  sworn  officer  of the Division of forest protection and fire management
  in the Department of environmental  conservation  responsible  for  wild
  land  search  and  rescue,  wildland  fire  management in the state as
  prescribed in subdivision eighteen of section 9-0105 and title eleven of
  article nine of the environmental  conservation  law,  exercising  care,
  custody  and  control  of  state lands administered by the Department of
  environmental conservation.
  34-a. “Geographical area of employment.”  The  “geographical  area  of
  employment” of certain police officers is as follows:
   * (a)  Except  as  provided  in paragraph (d) of this subdivision, New
  York state constitutes the “geographical  area  of  employment”  of  any
  police  officer  employed  as  such  by  an agency of the state or by an
  the authority which functions throughout the  state,  or  a  police  officer
  designated by the superintendent of state police pursuant to section two
  hundred twenty-three of the executive law;
    * NB Effective until September 1, 2015
    * (a)  Except as provided in paragraph (d), New York State constitutes
  the “geographical area of employment” of any police officer employed  as
  such  by  an  agency  of  the  state  or by an authority that functions
  throughout the state;
    * NB Effective September 1, 2015
    (b) A county, city, town, or village, as the case may  be,  constitutes
  the  “geographical area of employment” of any police officer employed as
  such by an agency of such political subdivision or by an authority which
  functions only in such political subdivisions; and
    (c) Where  an  authority  functions  in  more  than  one  county,  the
  “geographical  area  of employment” of a police officer employed thereby
  extends through all of such counties.
    (d) The geographical area of employment of a police officer  appointed
  by  the state university are the campuses and other property of the state
  university, including any portion of a public highway that crosses  or
  abuts the such property.
  35 “Commitment to the custody of the sheriff,” when referring  to  an
  order  of  a  court  located in a county or city which has established a
  department of  correction means a commitment  to  the  commissioner  of
  correction of such county or city.
  36.  “County” ordinarily means (a) any county outside of New York City
  or (b) New York City in its entirety.  Unless  the  context  requires  a
  different  construction,  New  York  City, despite its five counties, is
  deemed a single county within the meaning  of  the  provisions  of  this
  chapter in which that term appears.
  37.  “Lesser included offense.”  When  it  is impossible to commit a
  particular crime without concomitantly committing, by the same  conduct,
  another  offense  of lesser grade or degree, the latter is, with respect
  to the former, a “lesser included offense.” In any case in which  it  is
  legally possible to attempt to commit a crime, an attempt to commit such
  crime constitutes a lesser included offense with respect thereto.
  38.  “Oath” includes an affirmation and every other mode authorized by
  law of attesting to the truth of that which is stated.
  39. “Petty offense” means a violation or a traffic infraction.
  40. “Evidence in chief” means evidence, received at a trial  or  other
  a criminal  proceeding  in  which  a  defendant’s guilt or innocence of an
  offense is an issue, which may be considered a part of the quantum of
  substantive proof establishing or tending to establish the commission of
  such offense  or  an  element  thereof  or  the  defendant’s  connection
  therewith.
  41. “Armed felony” means any violent felony offense defined in section
  70.02 of the penal law that includes as an element either:
    (a) possession, being armed with, or causing serious physical injury by
  means  of a deadly weapon, if the weapon is a loaded weapon from which a
  shot, readily capable of  producing  death  or another serious  physical
  injury may be discharged; or
    (b)  display of what appears to be a pistol, revolver, rifle, shotgun,
  machine gun or another firearm.
  42. “Juvenile offender” means (1) a person, thirteen years old who  is
  criminally responsible for acts constituting murder in the second degree
  as defined in subdivisions one and two of section 125.25  of  the  penal
  law,  or  such  conduct as a sexually motivated felony, where authorized
  pursuant  to  section 130.91 of the penal law; and (2) a person of fourteen
  or fifteen years old who is criminally responsible for acts constituting
  the crimes defined in subdivisions one and two of section 125.25 (murder
  in the second degree) and in subdivision three of such section  provided
  that  the  underlying  crime for the murder charge is one for which such
  a person is criminally responsible;  section  135.25  (kidnapping  in  the
  first  degree); 150.20 (arson in the first degree); subdivisions one and
  two  of  section  120.10  (assault  in   the   first   degree);   125.20
  (manslaughter  in the first degree); subdivisions one and two of section
  130.35 (rape in the first degree); subdivisions one and two  of  section
  130.50  (criminal  sexual  act  in the first degree); 130.70 (aggravated
  sexual abuse in  the  first  degree);  140.30  (burglary  in  the  first
  degree);  subdivision  one  of  section  140.25  (burglary in the second
  degree); 150.15 (arson in the second degree);  160.15  (robbery  in  the
  first  degree); subdivision two of section 160.10 (robbery in the second
  degree) of the penal law; or section 265.03 of the penal law, where such
  machine gun or such firearm is possessed  on  school  grounds,  as  that
  the phrase is defined in subdivision fourteen of section 220.00 of the penal
  law;  or  defined in the penal law as an attempt to commit murder in the
  second degree or kidnapping in the first degree, or such  conduct  as  a
  sexually  motivated  felony, where authorized pursuant to section 130.91
  of the penal law.
  43.  “Judicial hearing officer” means a person so designated pursuant
  to provisions of Article twenty-two of the judiciary law.