STATE OF NEW YORK ________________________________________________________________________ 4825 2023-2024 Regular Sessions IN ASSEMBLY February 23, 2023 ___________ Introduced by M. of A. RAMOS -- read once and referred to the Committee on Judiciary AN ACT to amend the judiciary law, in relation to establishing gang courts; and providing for the repeal of such provisions upon expira- tion thereof The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem- bly, do enact as follows: 1 Section 1. Findings. The legislature hereby finds and declares that 2 the growth of criminal gang activities have created a public safety 3 crisis and social disorder in many communities across our state. To this 4 point, our system of justice has failed to successfully deter the spread 5 of this criminality. Whether it is the distribution and sale of 6 controlled substances, street crime, gun violence, prostitution or 7 simply the climate of fear, intimidation, and disorder that poison our 8 neighborhoods, many afflicted localities appear to be under siege. To 9 address this problem, the state should be flexible and seek integrated 10 ways of employing the resources of our judicial and criminal justice 11 system and other state and local entities. 12 Based on the foregoing findings the legislature hereby declares that 13 the New York unified court system should be empowered to establish a 14 gang court pilot program within available appropriations, to help 15 address these broad based issues. The legislature contemplates that the 16 program authorized in this act may consist of three special gang courts, 17 one in the county of Orange, one in the county of Nassau, and one in the 18 county of Suffolk, to hear and determine gang related criminal cases, 19 properly venued in compliance with the criminal procedure law, from 20 within each respective county, commencing no later than January first, 21 two thousand twenty-four and continuing, at least, until January first, 22 two thousand twenty-nine. 23 The legislature declares that the resources necessary for these 24 special gang parts of the courts of Orange county, the courts of Nassau EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets [ ] is old law to be omitted. LBD08272-01-3
A. 4825 2 1 county, and the courts of Suffolk county can be made available only 2 through a combination of federal funds from the law enforcement assist- 3 ance administration of the United States department of justice, and 4 state and local funds, services and facilities. 5 § 2. The judiciary law is amended by adding a new article 5-C to read 6 as follows: 7 ARTICLE 5-C 8 GANG COURT PILOT PROGRAM 9 Section 178. Special gang parts; establishment. 10 178-a. Transfer of cases to special gang parts. 11 178-b. Procedure in a special gang part. 12 § 178. Special gang parts; establishment. 1. There may be established 13 in the courts of Orange county, the courts of Nassau county, and the 14 courts of Suffolk county special gang parts in such numbers and at such 15 locations as shall be designated by the chief administrator of the 16 courts, by administrative order, to effectuate the purposes of this 17 article subject to availability of adequate funding within money appro- 18 priated within a given fiscal year. Such parts shall hear and determine 19 gang related criminal cases assigned thereto from any court within such 20 counties. 21 2. The chief administrator for the courts, in consultation with all 22 appropriate state and county agencies, may request that all currently 23 available resources be made available to the special gang court parts 24 and authorize these special parts to develop and implement new programs 25 as deemed necessary to further the administration of justice. 26 For purposes of this article, "criminal gang" is defined as a group of 27 three or more persons who, through the organization, formation, and 28 establishment of an assemblage, share a common identity and, whose 29 members, as a core undertaking of their group, actively engage in crimi- 30 nal conduct in violation of the penal law. 31 § 178-a. Transfer of cases to special gang parts. Notwithstanding any 32 other provision of law, upon or after arraignment on an accusatory 33 instrument charging a criminal offense committed by a member of a crimi- 34 nal gang as part of, or in the course of such illegal activities and 35 conduct in which such gang is purportedly engaging filed in a criminal 36 court within Orange county, within Nassau county, or within Suffolk 37 county and before entry of a plea of guilty or commencement of trial, 38 such court may order that the accusatory instrument and action be 39 assigned to the respective special gang part of the Orange county, 40 Nassau county, or Suffolk county court systems. 41 § 178-b. Procedure in a special gang part. The trial of any accusatory 42 instrument in a special gang part shall for all purposes be deemed to be 43 a trial, like any other criminal proceeding conducted in Orange county, 44 Nassau county, and Suffolk county respectively, in which the accusatory 45 instrument was filed, but the chief administrator of the courts may 46 promulgate rules, orders or regulations to be applicable to such parts 47 in place and instead of the rules, orders or regulations applicable to 48 courts in the county where the indictment was filed. The chief adminis- 49 trator shall provide by rule, order or regulation for at least the 50 following matters: the procedure of the part; its auxiliary services; 51 the assignment of judicial personnel; the appointment of terms; and 52 transmittal of all papers in the action, including all undertakings for 53 appearances of the defendant and of the witnesses, to the part of the 54 supreme court to which the action has been assigned consistent with the 55 criminal procedure law.
A. 4825 3 1 § 3. This act shall take effect on the first of January next succeed- 2 ing the date on which it shall have become a law and shall expire and be 3 deemed repealed 5 years after such effective date.