Section 632-A. Crime victims  


Latest version.
  • 1. For the purposes of this section:
        (a)  "Crime" means (i) any felony defined in the laws of the state; or
      (ii) an offense in any jurisdiction which includes all of the  essential
      elements  of  any  felony defined in the laws of this state and: (A) the
      crime victim, as defined in subparagraph (i) of paragraph  (d)  of  this
      subdivision,  was a resident of this state at the time of the commission
      of the offense; or (B) the act or acts constituting the offense occurred
      in whole or in part in this state.
        (b) "Profits from a crime" means (i) any property obtained through  or
      income  generated  from the commission of a crime of which the defendant
      was convicted; (ii) any property obtained by or  income  generated  from
      the  sale,  conversion or exchange of proceeds of a crime, including any
      gain realized by such  sale,  conversion  or  exchange;  and  (iii)  any
      property which the defendant obtained or income generated as a result of
      having  committed  the  crime, including any assets obtained through the
      use of unique  knowledge  obtained  during  the  commission  of,  or  in
      preparation  for  the  commission  of,  a crime, as well as any property
      obtained by or income generated from the sale, conversion or exchange of
      such property  and  any  gain  realized  by  such  sale,  conversion  or
      exchange.
        (c)  "Funds  of  a  convicted  person"  means  all  funds and property
      received from any source by a person convicted of a specified crime,  or
      by  the  representative  of such person as defined in subdivision six of
      section six hundred twenty-one of this article excluding  child  support
      and earned income, where such person:
        (i)   is   an  inmate  serving  a  sentence  with  the  department  of
      correctional services or a prisoner confined  at  a  local  correctional
      facility  or  federal  correctional institute, and includes funds that a
      superintendent, sheriff or municipal official receives on behalf  of  an
      inmate  or  prisoner  and deposits in an inmate account to the credit of
      the inmate pursuant to section one hundred sixteen of the correction law
      or deposits in a prisoner account to the credit of the prisoner pursuant
      to section five hundred-c of the correction law; or
        (ii) is not an inmate or prisoner but who is  serving  a  sentence  of
      probation  or  conditional  discharge  or  is  presently  subject  to an
      undischarged indeterminate, determinate or definite term of imprisonment
      or period of post-release supervision or term of supervised release, but
      shall include earned income earned during a period in which such  person
      was  not  in  compliance  with  the  conditions of his or her probation,
      parole, conditional release, period of post-release supervision  by  the
      division  of parole or term of supervised release with the United States
      probation office or United States parole  commission.  For  purposes  of
      this  subparagraph,  such period of non-compliance shall be measured, as
      applicable, from the earliest date  of  delinquency  determined  by  the
      board  or  division  of  parole,  or  from  the earliest date on which a
      declaration of delinquency is filed pursuant to section  410.30  of  the
      criminal  procedure  law  and thereafter sustained, or from the earliest
      date of delinquency determined in  accordance  with  applicable  federal
      law,   rules   or   regulations,   and  shall  continue  until  a  final
      determination sustaining the violation has been made by the trial court,
      board or division of parole, or appropriate federal authority; or
        (iii) is no longer subject to a sentence of probation  or  conditional
      discharge or indeterminate, determinate or definite term of imprisonment
      or period of post-release supervision or term of supervised release, and
      where  within  the  previous  three  years:  the full or maximum term or
      period terminated or expired or such person was granted a discharge by a
      board of parole pursuant to applicable law, or granted  a  discharge  or
      termination  from  probation  pursuant  to  applicable  law or granted a
    
      discharge or termination under applicable federal or state law, rules or
      regulations prior to the expiration of such  full  or  maximum  term  or
      period;  and  includes  only:  (A)  those funds paid to such person as a
      result  of  any  interest,  right, right of action, asset, share, claim,
      recovery or benefit of any  kind  that  the  person  obtained,  or  that
      accrued  in  favor  of  such  person,  prior  to  the expiration of such
      sentence, term or period; (B) any  recovery  or  award  collected  in  a
      lawsuit  after  expiration  of such sentence where the right or cause of
      action accrued prior to the expiration or service of such sentence;  and
      (C) earned income earned during a period in which such person was not in
      compliance  with  the  conditions  of  his  or  her  probation,  parole,
      conditional release, period of post-release supervision by the  division
      of parole or term of supervised release with the United States probation
      office  or  United  States  parole  commission.  For  purposes  of  this
      subparagraph, such  period  of  non-compliance  shall  be  measured,  as
      applicable,  from  the  earliest  date  of delinquency determined by the
      board or division of parole, or  from  the  earliest  date  on  which  a
      declaration  of  delinquency  is filed pursuant to section 410.30 of the
      criminal procedure law and thereafter sustained, or  from  the  earliest
      date  of  delinquency  determined  in accordance with applicable federal
      law,  rules  or  regulations,  and  shall   continue   until   a   final
      determination sustaining the violation has been made by the trial court,
      board or division of parole, or appropriate federal authority.
        (d)  "Crime  victim"  means  (i)  the  victim  of  a  crime;  (ii) the
      representative of a crime  victim  as  defined  in  subdivision  six  of
      section  six  hundred twenty-one of this article; (iii) a good samaritan
      as defined in subdivision seven of section  six  hundred  twenty-one  of
      this  article; (iv) the crime victims board or other governmental agency
      that has received an application for or provided financial assistance or
      compensation to the victim.
        (e) (i) "Specified crime" means:
        (A) a violent felony offense as defined in subdivision one of  section
      70.02 of the penal law;
        (B) a class B felony offense defined in the penal law;
        (C)  an  offense  for which a merit time allowance may not be received
      against the sentence pursuant to paragraph (d)  of  subdivision  one  of
      section eight hundred three of the correction law;
        (D)  an offense defined in the penal law that is titled in such law as
      a felony in the first degree;
        (E) grand larceny in the fourth degree as defined in  subdivision  six
      of  section  155.30  or grand larceny in the second degree as defined in
      section 155.40 of the penal law;
        (F) criminal possession of stolen property in  the  second  degree  as
      defined in section 165.52 of the penal law; or
        (G) an offense in any jurisdiction which includes all of the essential
      elements  of  any  of the crimes specified in clauses (A) through (F) of
      this subparagraph and either the crime victim as defined in subparagraph
      (i) of paragraph (d) of this subdivision was a resident of this state at
      the  time  of  the  commission  of  the  offense  or  the  act  or  acts
      constituting the crime occurred in whole or in part in this state.
        (ii)  Notwithstanding  the  provisions  of  subparagraph  (i)  of this
      paragraph a "specified crime" shall  not  mean  or  include  an  offense
      defined  in any of the following articles of the penal law: articles one
      hundred fifty-eight, one hundred seventy-eight, two hundred twenty,  two
      hundred twenty-one, two hundred twenty-five, and two hundred thirty.
        (f)  "Earned  income"  means  income  derived  from one's own labor or
      through active participation in a business as distinguished from  income
      from, for example, dividends or investments.
    
        2.  (a)  Every  person, firm, corporation, partnership, association or
      other legal entity, or representative of such person, firm, corporation,
      partnership, association or entity, which knowingly contracts for, pays,
      or agrees to pay: (i) any profits from a crime as defined  in  paragraph
      (b)  of  subdivision  one  of  this section, to a person charged with or
      convicted of that crime, or to the  representative  of  such  person  as
      defined  in  subdivision  six  of section six hundred twenty-one of this
      article; or (ii)  any  funds  of  a  convicted  person,  as  defined  in
      paragraph  (c) of subdivision one of this section, where such conviction
      is for a specified crime and the  value,  combined  value  or  aggregate
      value  of  the  payment or payments of such funds exceeds or will exceed
      ten thousand dollars, shall give written notice  to  the  crime  victims
      board  of  the payment or obligation to pay as soon as practicable after
      discovering that the payment or  intended  payment  constitutes  profits
      from a crime or funds of a convicted person.
        (b)  Notwithstanding  subparagraph  (ii)  of  paragraph  (a)  of  this
      subdivision, whenever the payment or obligation to pay involves funds of
      a convicted person that a superintendent, sheriff or municipal  official
      receives  or will receive on behalf on an inmate serving a sentence with
      the department of correctional services or prisoner confined at a  local
      correctional  facility and deposits or will deposit in an inmate account
      to the credit of the inmate or in a prisoner account to  the  credit  of
      the  prisoner,  and the value, combined value or aggregate value of such
      funds exceeds or will exceed ten thousand dollars,  the  superintendent,
      sheriff  or  municipal  official  shall  also give written notice to the
      crime victims board.
        Further, whenever the state or subdivision of the state makes  payment
      or  has  an obligation to pay funds of a convicted person, as defined in
      subparagraph (ii) or (iii) of paragraph (c) of subdivision one  of  this
      section,  and the value, combined value or aggregate value of such funds
      exceeds or will exceed ten thousand dollars, the state or subdivision of
      the state shall also give written notice to the crime victims board.
        In all other instances where the payment or obligation to pay involves
      funds of a convicted person, as defined in subparagraph (ii) or (iii) of
      paragraph (c) of  subdivision  one  of  this  section,  and  the  value,
      combined  value  or aggregate value of such funds exceeds or will exceed
      ten thousand dollars, the convicted person who receives or will  receive
      such  funds,  or  the  representative  of  such  person  as  defined  in
      subdivision six of section six hundred twenty-one of this article, shall
      give written notice to the crime victims board.
        (c) The board, upon receipt of notice of a contract, an  agreement  to
      pay  or  payment  of profits from a crime or funds of a convicted person
      pursuant to paragraph (a) or (b) of this subdivision, or upon receipt of
      notice of funds of a convicted person from the  superintendent,  sheriff
      or  municipal  official  of the facility where the inmate or prisoner is
      confined pursuant to section one hundred sixteen or  five  hundred-c  of
      the  correction  law,  shall  notify  all  known  crime  victims  of the
      existence of such profits or funds at their last known address.
        3. Notwithstanding any inconsistent provision of the  estates,  powers
      and  trusts  law or the civil practice law and rules with respect to the
      timely bringing of an action, any crime victim shall have the  right  to
      bring  a  civil  action  in a court of competent jurisdiction to recover
      money damages from a person convicted of a  crime  of  which  the  crime
      victim  is  a  victim,  or  the representative of that convicted person,
      within three years of the discovery of any profits from a crime or funds
      of a convicted person, as those  terms  are  defined  in  this  section.
      Notwithstanding  any  other provision of law to the contrary, a judgment
      obtained pursuant to this section shall not be subject to  execution  or
    
      enforcement  against  the  first  one  thousand  dollars deposited in an
      inmate account to the credit of  the  inmate  pursuant  to  section  one
      hundred  sixteen  of  the correction law or in a prisoner account to the
      credit  of  the  prisoner  pursuant  to  section  five  hundred-c of the
      correction law. In addition, where the civil action involves funds of  a
      convicted  person  and such funds were recovered by the convicted person
      pursuant to a judgment obtained in a civil action, a  judgment  obtained
      pursuant  to this section may not be subject to execution or enforcement
      against a portion thereof in accordance with subdivision (k) of  section
      fifty-two hundred five of the civil practice law and rules. If an action
      is  filed pursuant to this subdivision after the expiration of all other
      applicable statutes of limitation, any other crime victims must file any
      action for damages as a result of the crime within three  years  of  the
      actual  discovery  of  such  profits  or funds, or within three years of
      actual notice received from or notice published  by  the  crime  victims
      board of such discovery, whichever is later.
        4.  Upon  filing  an  action  pursuant  to  subdivision  three of this
      section, the crime victim shall give notice to the crime  victims  board
      of  the  filing by delivering a copy of the summons and complaint to the
      board.  The crime victim may also give such notice to the board prior to
      filing the action so as to allow the board to apply for any  appropriate
      provisional  remedies which are otherwise authorized to be invoked prior
      to the commencement of an action.
        5. Upon receipt of a copy of a summons and complaint, or upon  receipt
      of  notice  from the crime victim prior to filing the action as provided
      in subdivision four of this section, the board  shall  immediately  take
      such actions as are necessary to:
        (a)  notify  all other known crime victims of the alleged existence of
      profits from a crime or funds of a convicted person by  certified  mail,
      return  receipt  requested,  where  the victims' names and addresses are
      known by the board;
        (b) publish, at least once every six months for three years  from  the
      date  it is initially notified by a victim, pursuant to subdivision four
      of this section, a legal notice in newspapers of general circulation  in
      the county wherein the crime was committed and in counties contiguous to
      such  county advising any crime victims of the existence of profits from
      a crime or funds of a convicted person. For crimes committed in a county
      located within a city having a population of one million  or  more,  the
      notice  shall  be  published in newspapers having general circulation in
      such city. The board may, in its discretion, provide for such additional
      notice as it deems necessary;
        (c) avoid the wasting of the assets identified in the complaint as the
      newly discovered profits from a crime or as funds of a convicted person,
      in any manner consistent with subdivision six of this section.
        6. The board, acting on behalf of the plaintiff and all other victims,
      shall have the right to apply for any and all provisional remedies  that
      are also otherwise available to the plaintiff.
        (a)  The  provisional remedies of attachment, injunction, receivership
      and notice of pendency  available  to  the  plaintiff  under  the  civil
      practice  law  and  rules,  shall  also be available to the board in all
      actions under this section.
        (b) On a motion for a provisional remedy, the moving party shall state
      whether any other provisional remedy has previously been sought  in  the
      same action against the same defendant. The court may require the moving
      party  to  elect  between  those remedies to which it would otherwise be
      entitled.
        7. (a) (i) Whenever it appears that a person or entity  has  knowingly
      and willfully failed to give notice in violation of paragraph (a) or (b)
    
      of  subdivision two of this section, other than the state, a subdivision
      of the state, or a person who is a superintendent, sheriff or  municipal
      official required to give notice pursuant to this section or section one
      hundred  sixteen  or  section  five hundred-c of the correction law, the
      board shall be authorized to serve a notice of hearing upon  the  person
      or  entity  by  personal service or by registered or certified mail. The
      notice shall contain the time, place and  purpose  of  the  hearing.  In
      addition,  the  notice shall be accompanied by a petition alleging facts
      of an evidentiary character that support or tend  to  support  that  the
      person  or entity, who shall be named therein as a respondent, knowingly
      and willfully failed to give notice in violation of paragraph (a) or (b)
      of subdivision two of this section. Service of the notice  and  petition
      shall take place at least fifteen days prior to the date of the hearing.
        (ii)  The  chairperson of the board, or any board member designated by
      the chairperson, shall preside over the hearing.  The  presiding  member
      shall  administer  oaths  and  may issue subpoenas. The presiding member
      shall not be bound by the rules of evidence or civil procedure, but  his
      or  her determination shall be based on a preponderance of the evidence.
      At the hearing, the burden of proof shall be on the board,  which  shall
      be  represented by the counsel to the board or another person designated
      by the board. The board shall produce witnesses and present evidence  in
      support  of  the  alleged  violation, which may include relevant hearsay
      evidence. The respondent, who may  appear  personally  at  the  hearing,
      shall  have  the  right  of  counsel and may cross-examine witnesses and
      produce evidence and witnesses in his or her behalf, which  may  include
      relevant  hearsay evidence. The issue of whether the person who received
      an alleged payment or obligation to pay committed the  underlying  crime
      shall not be re-litigated at the hearing. Where the alleged violation is
      the  failure  to  give  notice of a payment amount involving two or more
      payments the combined value or aggregate  value  of  which  exceeds  ten
      thousand  dollars,  no  violation shall be found unless it is shown that
      such payments were intentionally structured to conceal  their  character
      as funds of a convicted person, as defined in this section.
        (iii) At the conclusion of the hearing, if the presiding member is not
      satisfied  that  there  is  a  preponderance of evidence in support of a
      violation, the member shall  dismiss  the  petition.  If  the  presiding
      member  is  satisfied that there is a preponderance of the evidence that
      the respondent committed one or more violations,  the  member  shall  so
      find.  Upon such a finding, the presiding member shall prepare a written
      statement, to be made  available  to  the  respondent  and  respondent's
      counsel,  indicating  the evidence relied on and the reasons for finding
      the violation.
        (iv)  The  board   shall   adopt,   promulgate,   amend   and   repeal
      administrative  rules  and  regulations  governing  the procedures to be
      followed with respect to hearings, including rules and  regulations  for
      the administrative appeal of a decision made pursuant to this paragraph,
      provided  such  rules and regulations are consistent with the provisions
      of this subdivision.
        (b)(i) Whenever  it  is  found  pursuant  to  paragraph  (a)  of  this
      subdivision  that  a  respondent  knowingly and willfully failed to give
      notice in violation of paragraph (a) or (b) of subdivision two  of  this
      section, the board shall impose an assessment of up to the amount of the
      payment  or  obligation to pay and a civil penalty of up to one thousand
      dollars or ten percent of the payment or obligation to pay, whichever is
      greater. If a respondent fails to pay the assessment and  civil  penalty
      imposed pursuant to this paragraph, the assessment and civil penalty may
      be  recovered  from  the respondent by an action brought by the attorney
      general, upon the request of  the  board,  in  any  court  of  competent
    
      jurisdiction.  The  board  shall  deposit  the  assessment  in an escrow
      account pending the expiration of the three year statute of  limitations
      authorized  by  subdivision three of this section to preserve such funds
      to  satisfy  a  civil judgment in favor of a person who is a victim of a
      crime committed by the convicted person to whom  such  failure  to  give
      notice  relates.  The  board  shall  pay  the civil penalty to the state
      comptroller who shall deposit the money in the state  treasury  pursuant
      to section one hundred twenty-one of the state finance law to the credit
      of  the  criminal  justice  improvement  account  established by section
      ninety-seven-bb of the state finance law.
        (ii) The board shall then notify any crime victim  or  crime  victims,
      who  may  have a claim against the convicted person, of the existence of
      such moneys. Such notice shall instruct such person or persons that they
      may have a right to  commence  a  civil  action  against  the  convicted
      person, as well as any other information deemed necessary by the board.
        (iii)  Upon  a  crime  victim's  presentation  to the board of a civil
      judgment for damages incurred as a result of the crime, the board  shall
      satisfy  up to one hundred percent of that judgment, including costs and
      disbursements as taxed by the clerk of the court, with the escrowed fund
      obtained pursuant to this paragraph, but in no event shall the amount of
      all judgments, costs and  disbursements  satisfied  from  such  escrowed
      funds  exceed  the  amount in escrow. If more than one such crime victim
      indicates to the board that they intend to commence or have commenced  a
      civil  action  against  the  convicted  person,  the  board  shall delay
      satisfying any judgment, costs and disbursements until the claims of all
      such crime victims are reduced to judgment.  If  the  aggregate  of  all
      judgments,  costs  and  disbursement  obtained  exceeds  the  amount  of
      escrowed funds, the amount used to partially satisfy each judgment shall
      be reduced to a pro rata share.
        (iv) After expiration of the three year statute of limitations  period
      established in subdivision three of this section, the board shall review
      all  judgments that have been satisfied from such escrowed funds. In the
      event no claim was filed or judgment obtained prior to the expiration of
      the three year statute  of  limitations,  the  board  shall  return  the
      escrowed  amount  to  the respondent. In the event a claim or claims are
      pending at the expiration of the  statute  of  limitations,  such  funds
      shall  remain  escrowed until the final determination of all such claims
      to allow the board to satisfy any judgment which may be obtained by  the
      crime  victim.  Upon  the final determination of all such claims and the
      satisfaction of up to one hundred percent of such claims by  the  board,
      the  board  shall be authorized to impose an additional civil penalty of
      up to one thousand dollars or ten percent of the payment  or  obligation
      to  pay,  whichever  is greater. Prior to imposing any such penalty, the
      board shall serve a notice upon the respondent by personal service or by
      registered or certified mail of the intent of the board to  impose  such
      penalty  thirty days after the date of the notice and of the opportunity
      to submit documentation  concerning  the  board's  determination.  After
      imposing  and  deducting  any  such  additional civil penalty, the board
      shall distribute such remaining escrowed  funds,  if  any,  as  follows:
      fifty  percent  to the state comptroller, who shall deposit the money in
      the state treasury pursuant section one hundred twenty-one of the  state
      finance  law  to  the credit of the criminal justice improvement account
      established by section ninety-seven-bb of the  state  finance  law;  and
      fifty percent to the respondent.
        (v)  Notwithstanding  any  provision  of  law, an alleged failure by a
      convicted person to give notice under this section  may  not  result  in
      proceedings  for  an  alleged  violation of the conditions of probation,
      parole, conditional release,  post  release  supervision  or  supervised
    
      release  unless:  one or more claims were made by a crime victim against
      the convicted person pursuant to this section,  and  the  crime  victims
      board  imposes  an  assessment  and/or penalty upon the convicted person
      pursuant  to  this  section,  and  the convicted person fails to pay the
      total amount of the assessment and/or penalty within sixty days  of  the
      imposition of such assessment and/or penalty.
        (vi) Records maintained by the board and proceedings by the board or a
      board  member based thereon regarding a claim submitted by a victim or a
      claimant shall be deemed confidential, subject to  the  exceptions  that
      appear  in  subdivision  one of section six hundred thirty-three of this
      article.