New York State · Penal Law estimate
NY Criminal Weapon Possession Calculator.
New York gun and weapon possession sentencing estimator
NY Penal Law §265.01-§265.03
Class A misdemeanor · Class E · Class C · Class B felony
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The briefing · NY CRIMINAL WEAPON POSSESSION
NY State calculator · NY Penal Law §265.01-§265.03
Class A misdemeanor · Class E · Class C · Class B felony
Estimate only. Not legal advice. New York sentencing and collateral consequences depend on plea offers, prior record, and your personal circumstances.
How this charge is sentenced in New York.
New York has some of the strictest weapon laws in the country. Possession on school grounds, loaded firearms, and prior convictions escalate charges rapidly.
What moves the number.
A loaded firearm outside the home without a carry license is commonly charged as Criminal Possession of a Weapon in the Second Degree.
FAQ · NY CRIMINAL WEAPON POSSESSION
01 How does the NY Criminal Weapon Possession sentencing calculator work?
Select the felony class or offense degree, your prior record, and any aggravating factors shown on the page. The tool applies New York Penal Law §70.00 and offense-specific statutes to estimate the likely minimum and maximum term.
02 Is this the exact sentence a New York judge will impose for NY Criminal Weapon Possession?
No. Judges have discretion within the statutory range, and plea bargains often resolve below the maximum. This calculator shows the framework under PL §70.00 - your specific facts, prior record, and negotiation strategy determine the final number.
03 What collateral consequences follow a NY Criminal Weapon Possession conviction?
A conviction carries consequences beyond jail time, fines, and treatment. These are called collateral consequences or invisible punishments. They can affect jobs, housing, public benefits, citizenship, education, and student loans - even if you did not know about them when negotiating a plea. In some cases, even an arrest can trigger collateral consequences before any conviction. Weapon convictions trigger firearm disqualification and can block public-office and licensed-security employment. Common examples include: Firearm license revocation - NYC and state pistol permits are revoked after most felony weapon convictions. Permanent prohibition - federal and state law bar firearm possession after felony weapon convictions. Public office - misdemeanor and felony convictions can block jobs as a police officer, firefighter, notary public, or elected official without a Certificate of Good Conduct. Relief may be available through a Certificate of Relief from Disabilities (any number of misdemeanors or violations, but no more than one felony - same-day felonies in one court count as one), a Certificate of Good Conduct (two or more felonies, or public-office applications), CPL §160.59 sealing of up to two convictions after ten years, or conditional CPL §160.58 sealing after completing court-recognized drug treatment. Requesting a CRD at sentencing can restore the right to apply for jobs, licenses, and public housing you would otherwise be barred from - approval is not guaranteed, and you must still disclose the conviction on applications.
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