New York's gun laws are among the strictest in the country. Criminal possession of a loaded firearm outside the home or place of business is a Class C violent felony under Penal Law § 265.03 carrying a mandatory minimum of 3 1/2 years in state prison. The Sullivan Act — the original 1911 statute — treats unlicensed handgun possession harshly, and the 2019 amendments increased exposure further.
Most gun-possession arrests in New York City come from car stops, street stops, or warrant searches of an apartment. The defense work starts with the constitutional posture of whichever event produced the gun.
Where the gun is found in a shared car, a glove box, an apartment, or a bag near multiple people, the prosecution proceeds on constructive possession — that the defendant exercised dominion and control over the weapon. We attack constructive-possession cases by showing the absence of dominion, the presence of other plausible possessors, the lack of forensic links (no fingerprints, no DNA), and the failure to interview occupants of the space.
New York recognizes a defense of temporary innocent or lawful possession: a person who briefly possesses a gun for the purpose of turning it over to police, removing it from a child, or preventing imminent harm is not guilty under PL § 265. The defense is fact-specific and requires careful preparation.
The Supreme Court's decision in NYSRPA v. Bruen reshaped Second Amendment doctrine and has produced a wave of as-applied and facial challenges to New York's licensing scheme. Where the facts fit, we raise Bruen-based defenses to certain § 265 charges.
If you have been arrested on a gun-possession charge in New York, call us at 212-233-1233 or email email@goodwindefense.com.