New York
Restoration of Rights & Record Relief
Contents
Last updated: October 28, 2024
I. Loss & restoration of civil/firearms rights
A. Voting
In New York, the right to vote is lost upon conviction of a felony if sentenced to a term of actual imprisonment, and it is restored upon release from incarceration. See N.Y. Elec. Law § 5-106(2) (“No person who has been convicted of a felony and sentenced to a period of imprisonment for such felony pursuant to the laws of this state, shall have the right to register for or vote at any election while he or she is incarcerated for such felony.”) See also § 5-106(3) (federal convictions); § 5-106(4) (out-of-state convictions). These provisions “shall not apply if the person so convicted is not sentenced to either death or imprisonment, or if the execution of a sentence of imprisonment is suspended.” § 5-106(5). Prior to passage of S830B in 2021, the right to vote was not restored automatically under the election law until discharge from parole, unless the individual was issued a Certificate of Relief from Disabilities or Certificate of Good Conduct — though between 2018 and 2021 parolees were restored to the franchise by a gubernatorial executive order conditionally pardoning them.1
B. Jury & public office
Persons convicted of a felony may not serve on a jury, N.Y. Jud. Law § 510(3), and they forfeit any public office they hold. N.Y. Pub. Off. Law § 30(1)(e). Additionally, a public official forfeits their office if convicted of a crime involving “violation of the oath of office,” defined as a crime an element of which is “knowing or intentional conduct indicative of a lack of moral integrity.” See Feola v. Carroll, 10 N.Y.3d 569, 572-73, 890 N.E.2d 219, 860 N.Y.S.2d 457 (2008) (citing Duffy v. Ward, 81 N.Y.2d 127, 134-35, 612 N.E.2d 1213, 596 N.Y.S.2d 746 (1993)).
New York does not disqualify all convicted persons from holding future public office as a general matter, though specific professions may be restricted. See Op. Att’y Gen. 83-60 (1983) (conviction of felony resulting in sentence of probation and fine does not render the individual ineligible to run for public office). But see N.Y. Const. art. VI, § 22(h) (judges removed from office disqualified from future judicial office); In re Alamo v. Strohm, 544 N.E.2d 608 (N.Y. 1989) (officeholder who forfeits office is ineligible to stand for election to the remainder of the unexpired term). While it is not clear whether a convicted individual may stand for a new elective office, those seeking public employment as a police officer, firefighter, or notary, for example, must obtain a Certificate of Good Conduct. See N.Y. Exec. Law § 130 (executive pardon or CGC sufficient to overcome bar to notary public position for person with conviction).
Civil rights lost may be restored either by a governor’s pardon (see IIA below), or by a Certificate of Relief from Disabilities or Certificate of Good Conduct (available from the sentencing court or Department of Corrections and Community Supervision (formerly the Parole Board), see Part IIIC below). Even if jury eligibility is restored, “a commissioner of jurors may consider a criminal conviction in determining the qualifications of a person to serve as a juror.” N.Y. Op. Atty. Gen. 38 (N.Y.A.G.), 1991 WL 499877. Presumably the court may also do so in considering a strike for cause.
C. Firearms
Firearms rights are lost upon conviction of a felony or “serious offense.” N.Y. Penal Law §§ 400.00(1)(c), 265.01(4) (rifles, shotguns, antique firearms, black powder shotguns, black powder rifles, or any muzzle loading firearm). Rights may be regained by a pardon, or by a Certificate of Relief from Disabilities or Good Conduct. See N.Y. Correct. Law §§ 701(2), 703-a (2); see also 1975 NY Ops Atty Gen Nov 24. Restoration must be specified in the document, and Class A-1 and violent felonies are ineligible.
D. Information on record relief & fair chance employment
The Legal Action Center has prepared a very helpful booklet that explains in laymen’s terms how to get a record sealed and how to obtain certificates relieving disabilities (see Part IIIB) and the effect of these forms of relief. It includes a step-by-step guide to how a private individual can go about having their record sealed, including model letters and forms. See Legal Action Center, Lowering Conviction Record Barriers: Certificates of Relief/Good Conduct and Record Sealing (2022). LAC also has a booklet explaining what New York employers may and may not ask about a person’s criminal record, how a person should describe their record, and what rights people with a criminal record have to be free of job discrimination. See Legal Action Center, Criminal Legal FAQs.
II. Pardon policy & practice
A. Authority
The pardon power is vested in the governor (except in cases of treason or impeachment). N.Y. Const. art 4, § 4. It may be regulated only as to the manner of applying. The governor must report annually on the number of pardons and his reasons for granting them (“The governor shall annually communicate to the legislature each case of reprieve, commutation or pardon granted, stating the name of the convict, the crime of which the convict was convicted, the sentence and its date, and the date of the commutation, pardon or reprieve.”) Id.
B. Administration
Governor Kathy Hochul has instituted reforms in the pardon process to make it more accessible to ordinary individuals, and she has used the pardon power in a systematic way. Upon taking office in 2021, Governor Hochul instituted a number of modifications in the clemency process, and she has used the power primarily to permit individuals convicted many years before to regularize their immigration status:
The Governor’s Office has taken a number of steps to improve transparency and communication in the clemency process. The Executive Clemency Bureau has implemented a new policy of sending regular letters to individuals with clemency applications, informing them of their case status, and providing information about how to submit supplemental information in support of their applications. The Governor’s Office also launched an updated online web hub to assist clemency applicants with the application process; this hub includes template clemency application forms for both pardons and commutations to provide prospective applicants with improved guidance about what information to include when they apply.
The Governor also convened a Clemency Advisory Panel comprised of impartial experts to assist in advising the Governor on clemency applications. Following recommendations from the Clemency Advisory Panel, Governor Hochul is granting pardons to 11 individuals and commuting the sentences of two individuals.
The New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision (DOCCS) (formerly the Board of Parole) advises the governor on clemency cases through the Executive Clemency Bureau. N.Y. Exec. Law § 259-c. Absent exceptional or compelling circumstances, a pardon will not be considered if there is an adequate administrative remedy available. Pardon is considered only if there is no other legal remedy in three circumstances: 1) to set aside a conviction in cases of innocence; 2) to relieve collateral disability (“This is rarely used since relief may generally be obtained by means of a Certificate of Good Conduct or Relief from Disabilities.”); and 3) to prevent deportation or permit reentry. The Executive Clemency Bureau within the DOCCS screens candidates for eligibility requirements, gathers materials concerning clemency applications, and responds to letters from applicants and others regarding clemency applications. Id. Ordinarily a pardon is not a basis for sealing or expungement (but see the new pardon initiative applicable to 16- and 17-years-olds, infra.).
A New York State government website includes procedural and substantive standards for considering pardon and describes other forms of relief available.
Youth pardons: Past governors of New York have established special programs to consider clemency. For example, at the end of 2015, Governor Cuomo announced a special pardon program that would was said to be potentially applicable to 10,000 people convicted of misdemeanors or non-violent felonies at age 16 or 17. In its present form, this program is described at https://www.ny.gov/services/apply-clemency. According to the state’s clemency website, “If you receive this pardon, the New York State Office of Court Administration has stated that it will restrict public access to your criminal history, meaning that it will not be available to private employers, landlords or other companies that seek this information.” Id.
C. Frequency of grants
Recent governors have used their power fairly systematically to benefit non-citizens seeking to regularize their immigration status. As of May 2024, Governor Hochul had pardoned 50-odd individuals since taking office in 2021, in most cases to avoid deportation or other immigration consequences. Governors Andrew Cuomo and David Paterson both exercised their pardon power in different ways to benefit different classes of individuals, reviving a tradition of routine pardoning that had been dormant in New York for several terms. See A.G. Sulzberger, The Tradition of Granting Clemency and Second-Guessing It, N.Y. Times (Dec. 2, 2009).
[I]n recent decades each successive governor, Democrat or Republican, has granted clemency to fewer inmates even as the prison population continued to rise to the current level of approximately 60,000, according to information provided by the Division of Parole. According to that information, Gov. Hugh L. Carey commuted the sentences of 155 people in eight years in office, Mr. Cuomo commuted the sentences of 37 people in 12 years, and Mr. Pataki commuted the sentences of 33 people and pardoned one – the deceased comedian Lenny Bruce — in 12 years. During his aborted term Gov. Eliot Spitzer pardoned one man, already out of prison, to prevent him from being deported.
As of December 3, 2019, Governor Cuomo had pardoned more than 50 non-citizens facing deportation or other immigration-related restrictions, See, e.g., Sarah Maslin Nir, To Stave Off a Deportation, Cuomo Pardons a 9/11 Volunteer, N.Y. Times, June 21, 2017. He had also restored the right to vote to more than 24,000 parolees (see above Part I) and granted conditional pardons to more than 140 individuals prosecuted as adults when teenagers.
Governor David Paterson was the first New York governor to use his pardon power on a regular basis to benefit non-citizens facing deportation or other immigration consequences. On May 3, 2010, Governor Paterson announced the establishment of a special panel of state officials to review cases of noncitizens lawfully resident in New York who were seeking pardon to avoid deportation. See Danny Hakim & Nina Bernstein, New Paterson Policy May Reduce Deportations, N.Y. Times (May 3, 2010). In December 2010 he pardoned 33 such individuals, many of whom had come to this country as children. See, e.g., Press Release, New York State Office of the Governor, Governor Paterson Announces Pardons (Dec. 6, 2010).
Prior to his establishment of an immigration pardon panel in May 2010, already nearing the end of his tenure, Governor Paterson had granted only three pardons.2 Governor Spitzer pardoned one individual, also to avoid deportation,3 and in 2003 Governor Pataki issued a posthumous pardon to satirist Lenny Bruce for his 1964 obscenity conviction based on his use of “bad words in a Greenwich Village nightclub act.”4
III. Expungement, sealing & other record relief
In June 2023, the New York legislature passed A1029C, the New York Clean Slate Act, which was signed into law by the governor several months later, just before Thanksgiving. The Act authorizes automatic sealing of most criminal conviction records after a graduated waiting period without further conviction. N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 160.57. The law is effective one year from enactment, with an additional three years (until November 2027) to seal eligible records.
The “purposes” provision of the new law cites the 1970s enactment of antidiscrimination legislation intended to protect individuals with a criminal history, but it notes that “While New York has made great strides in fighting discrimination on the basis of many attributes, experiences, and circumstances of New Yorkers, discrimination on the basis of past convictions still persists.”
Therefore, it is the intent of the legislature to further curb this discrimination by sealing from public access the conviction records of individuals for certain state convictions only after an individual has satisfied their sentence and the required period of time has passed, within which the individual has remained a law abiding citizen while ensuring that this otherwise sealed conviction information will remain accessible for law enforcement and other relevant and necessary purposes.
The waiting period under the Act for misdemeanors is three years after imposition of sentence or release from incarceration, and for eligible felonies eight years. The only felonies that are ineligible are registrable sex offenses and Class A felonies subject to a life sentence. No new convictions may have been entered during the waiting period and no charges may be pending, including charges in federal court and in other states (except for marijuana charges) and the person may not be under parole or probation supervision. If the defendant is subsequently convicted of a crime before a prior conviction is sealed, calculation of the waiting period “shall start upon the same date as the time calculation starts for the subsequent criminal conviction.”
After sealing, records will remain available for a wide range of specified purposes, including for determining suitability for “licensing, employment and similar activities where federal or state law requires a criminal background check be performed prior to granting licenses to or employing individuals in certain jobs, such as employment with children, elderly populations, or other vulnerable populations, as well as where federal or state law authorizes a criminal background check to be performed prior to the same type of employment or similar activity.” § 160.57(d). The law extends protection from negligent hiring liability to employers, landlords, licensing agencies, and others “if such record was sealed and was not provided to the person or entity by or on behalf of a governmental entity in accordance with this section in response to such person’s or entity’s authorized and timely request for conviction history information.” § 160.57(e)
Effective October 1, 2017, the state’s first general adult conviction sealing authority went into effect, allowing individuals with up to two convictions, only one of which may be a felony, to petition the court to seal the records of conviction for all crimes other than sex offenses and class A and violent felonies after a 10-year waiting period. See N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 160.59.
Eligibility
Individuals may seek sealing for up to two eligible convictions, only one of which may be a felony. N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 160.59(2)(a). Multiple eligible convictions “committed as part of the same criminal transaction” are considered a single conviction. § 160.59(1)(a). Ineligible offenses include most sex offenses, all “violent felonies,” and all Class A felonies. § 160.59(1)(a). Sealing is not available to individuals convicted of more than two crimes or more than one felony. § 160.59(3)(h). A 10-year waiting period applies, counted from the date of imposition of the latest sentence, or the date of release from the latest period of incarceration (if applicable).
Any eligible offense may be sealed only after at least ten years have passed since the imposition of the sentence on the defendant’s latest conviction or, if the defendant was sentenced to a period of incarceration, including a period of incarceration imposed in conjunction with a sentence of probation, the defendant’s latest release from incarceration. In calculating the ten year period under this subdivision, any period of time the defendant spent incarcerated after the conviction for which the application for sealing is sought, shall be excluded and such ten year period shall be extended by a period or periods equal to the time served under such incarceration.
§ 160.59(5). Individuals required to register as sex offenders and individuals who have exceeded the maximum allowable number of sealings under this section or the conditional sealing authority at N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 160.58 (applicable to diversion/drug treatment dispositions) are ineligible, as are those with pending charges or who have been convicted subsequent to the last conviction for which sealing is sought. § 160.59(3).
Procedure
Application is made to the court where the conviction for the most serious offense sought to be sealed occurred, or to the court where the individual was last convicted if all offenses for which sealing is sought are of the same class. N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 160.59(2)(a). Among other requirements, the application must contain a sworn statement of reasons why sealing should be granted. § 160.59(2)(b)(v). The application is assigned to sentencing judge if sealing is sought for a single conviction, and to the county/supreme court otherwise. § 160.59(2)(d). The District Attorney must be served, and has 45 days to object to the application. If there is no objection, the court may decide the application without a hearing. § 160.59(6).
Standard
N.Y. Crim. Proc. sec. 160.59(7):
In considering any such application, the sentencing judge or county or supreme court shall consider any relevant factors, including but not limited to:
(a) the amount of time that has elapsed since the defendant’s last conviction;
(b) the circumstances and seriousness of the offense for which the defendant is seeking relief, including whether the arrest charge was not an eligible offense;
(c) the circumstances and seriousness of any other offenses for which the defendant stands convicted;
(d) the character of the defendant, including any measures that the defendant has taken toward rehabilitation, such as participating in treatment programs, work, or schooling, and participating in community service or other volunteer programs;
(e) any statements made by the victim of the offense for which the defendant is seeking relief;
(f) the impact of sealing the defendant’s record upon his or her rehabilitation and upon his or her successful and productive reentry and reintegration into society; and
(g) the impact of sealing the defendant’s record on public safety and upon the public’s confidence in and respect for the law.
Effect
If sealing is granted, all “official records and papers relating to the arrests, prosecutions, and convictions, including all duplicates and copies thereof, on file with the division of criminal justice services or any court shall be sealed and not made available to any person or public or private agency.” N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 160.59(8). Exceptions apply: The sealed records remain available to enumerated “qualified agencies,” including courts, corrections agencies, and the office of professional medical conduct;5 to federal and state law enforcement for law enforcement purposes; to state entities responsible for issuing firearm licenses; to employers for screening applicants for police officer/peace officer employment; and to the FBI for firearm background checks. § 160.59(9). Additionally, law enforcement fingerprint records are not affected by the sealing order. § 160.59(8). Sealed convictions remain “convictions” for the purpose of sentence enhancement or establishing the elements of crime. § 160.59(10). Compare the stricter access provisions of the sealing law applicable to non-conviction records (below).
The New York State Human Rights Law, N.Y. Exec. Law § 296(16) was amended concurrent with the enactment of the sealing authority, prohibiting public and private employers and occupational licensing agencies from asking about, or taking adverse action (i.e., denying employment or licensure) because of, a sealed conviction. See also Part IV-B, below.
C. Judicial diversion and conditional sealing of drug offenses
N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 160.58 (2010) provides for conditional sealing of certain felony drug and other specified drug convictions, as defined in § 220 of the penal law (sale of controlled substances in the first degree, Class B felony), § 221 (criminal sale of marijuana, Class C felony). In addition, certain offenses listed in N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 410.91(5) (burglary, possession of stolen property, criminal mischief) may be diverted and upon completion of a judicial diversion program or a drug treatment alternative to prison or another judicially sanctioned drug treatment program of similar duration, requirements and level of supervision. Sealing may also extend to up to three prior misdemeanors. The procedure is set forth in N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 160.58(3):
At the request of the defendant or the district attorney of a county in which the defendant committed a crime that is the subject of the sealing application, the court may conduct a hearing to consider and review any relevant evidence offered by either party that would aid the court in its decision whether to seal the records of the defendant’s arrests, prosecutions and convictions. In making such a determination, the court shall consider any relevant factors, including but not limited to: (i) the circumstances and seriousness of the offense or offenses that resulted in the conviction or convictions; (ii) the character of the defendant, including his or her completion of the judicially sanctioned treatment program as described in subdivision one of this section; (iii) the defendant’s criminal history; and (iv) the impact of sealing the defendant’s records upon his or her rehabilitation and his or her successful and productive reentry and reintegration into society, and on public safety.
Diversion options:
1. Pre-plea
Diversion for substance abuse treatment – Authority for pre-plea judicial diversion is found in N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 216.00, .05, for persons charged with Class B and lesser felonies who have not been convicted of a violent offense in the past ten years, and no more than one violent felony. Court evaluates defendant for treatment for substance abuse or dependence, alcohol abuse or dependence and any co-occurring mental disorder or mental illness.
“Adjournment in Contemplation of Dismissal” (ACD) is available for those charged with a misdemeanor. § 170.55. Upon successful completion of a period of probation, the record may be sealed under § 160.50 (see below). An ACD disposition is not a conviction or admission of guilt and restores status lost:
The granting of an adjournment in contemplation of dismissal shall not be deemed to be a conviction or an admission of guilt. No person shall suffer any disability or forfeiture as a result of such an order. Upon the dismissal of the accusatory instrument pursuant to this section, the arrest and prosecution shall be deemed a nullity and the defendant shall be restored, in contemplation of law, to the status he occupied before his arrest and prosecution.
2. Post-plea: Deferred adjudication (DTAP)
Prior to the enactment of N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 160.58 in 2010, some New York district attorneys accomplished the same end through informal means. For example, in Brooklyn, an individual was permitted to plead guilty and have sentencing deferred upon agreement to participate in an in-patient drug treatment under the Drug Treatment Alternative to Prison (DTAP) program. The program targets people with drug-addiction issues arrested for nonviolent felony offenses who have previously been convicted of one or more nonviolent felonies. Eligibility for this program is controlled by the prosecutor. Qualified defendants enter a felony guilty plea and receive a deferred sentence that allows them to participate in a residential therapeutic community drug treatment program for a period of 15 to 24 months. Those who successfully complete the program have charges dismissed, and the record sealed. Those who fail are brought back to court by a special warrant enforcement team and sentenced to prison. The program, including the respective roles of the court and prosecutor, is described in People v. Fiammegta, 14 N.Y.3d 90; 923 N.E.2d 1123 (2010) (in its supervision of the DTAP plea and as a measure of the due process owed defendant, the trial court was obligated to make the requisite inquiry into the merits of defendant’s discharge). See also People v. Jenkins, 11 N.Y.3d 282; 898 N.E.2d 553 (2008) (court has broad discretion when supervising a defendant subject to DTAP, and in deciding whether the conditions of a DTAP plea agreement have been met).
Other deferred adjudication or deferred sentencing programs may also be available for people charged with minor offenses and people with mental illness, which may result in dismissal of charges and no record.
D. Victims of human trafficking
At any time after the entry of a judgment for any conviction (prior to a 2021 law, only prostitution offenses were eligible), the court may vacate the judgment on the ground that the defendant was a victim of human trafficking. N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 440.10. Official documentation of the defendant’s status as a victim of trafficking “shall create a presumption that the defendant’s participation in the offense was a result of having been a victim of sex trafficking, labor trafficking, aggraved labor trafficking, compelling prostitution or trafficking in persons, but shall not be required for granting a motion under this paragraph.” A motion made under this authority is confidential unless disclosure is specifically authorized by the court. If the court grants the motion, “it must vacate the judgment and dismiss the accusatory instrument, and may take such additional action as is appropriate in the circumstances” and “the court must vacate the judgment on the merits because the defendant’s participation in the offense was a result of having been a victim of trafficking.”
E. Marijuana convictions (automatic expungement)
SB 6579, signed on July 29, 2019, authorized automatic vacatur and “expungement” of convictions of possession of two ounces or less of marijuana. N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 160.50(3)(k)(i)–(iii), (5). The 2021 marijuana legalization bill, A1248A/S854A, signed March 30, 2021, will expand the list of marijuana offenses subject to automatic vacatur and expungement to include, among other things, misdemeanor and felony possession and misdemeanor sale offenses. Id.
“Expungement” is defined in N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 1.20(45) to mean that all records related to the conviction or proceedings shall be “marked as expunged” and the records shall not be available to any member of the public “other than the individual whose record has been expunged.” See also N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 160.50(1)(c)–(d), (5)(a). In addition, individuals whose convictions have been expunged may request in writing that the record be destroyed. § 160.50(5)(b)(i).
SB 6579 also provides that the marijuana convictions identified in § 160.50(3)(k) are vacated with a presumption that a plea for these offenses was not knowing, voluntary, and intelligent if it has “severe or ongoing consequences,” presumably meaning deportation or other severe immigration consequences. N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 440.10(1)(k). Upon granting the motion, the court must “vacate the judgment and dismiss the accusatory instrument.” § 440.10(6).
Lastly, the 2019 law tasked the office of court administration and division of criminal justice services with developing an information campaign to inform the public of automatic marijuana expungement and vacatur. N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 160.50(5)(d). Under S6614, signed the same day, the OCA was given one year to accomplish the expungements.
F. Non-conviction records
Sealing is automatic upon “termination of a criminal action or proceeding against a person in favor of such person,” unless the district attorney demonstrates to the satisfaction of the court or the court determines on its own motion “that the interests of justice require otherwise, and states the reasons for such determination on the record . . . .” § 160.50(1). “Termination of a criminal action against a person in favor of such person” is defined to include complete dismissals and complete acquittals, as well as arrests where the district attorney or relevant law enforcement agency has elected not to proceed. § 160.50(3). Upon sealing, the record shall be available to law enforcement only upon a court order, and to prosecutors and corrections personnel on a limited basis. § 160.50(1)(d). The effect of a sealing order is further explained in N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 160.60:
Upon the termination of a criminal action or proceeding against a person in favor of such person . . . the arrest and prosecution shall be deemed a nullity and the accused shall be restored, in contemplation of law, to the status he occupied before the arrest and prosecution. The arrest or prosecution shall not operate as a disqualification of any person so accused to pursue or engage in any lawful activity, occupation, profession, or calling. Except where specifically required or permitted by statute or upon specific authorization of a superior court, no such person shall be required to divulge information pertaining to the arrest or prosecution.
The sealing relief authorized by this law was made applicable automatically to cases decided prior to its enactment in 1992 by S1505 (2020 Budget), Part II, subpart M (p. 46). In 2019, sealing was extended to cases in which there had been no docket entry for five years. See See S1505 (2020 Budget), Part II, subpart L (p. 45), discussed below.
In addition, sealing is mandatory for non-criminal infractions/violations (except DWI and prostitution), regardless of whether the original charges were so classified (as clarified by a 2019 law), unless a court directs that these records not be sealed. See N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 160.55. A 2021 law also requires the sealing of prior convictions of loitering for the purpose of engaging in a prostitute offense under NY. Penal Law § 240.37 (along with repealing this offense). N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 160.55(k)(iv). Additional confidentiality and suppression provisions apply to Youthful Offender adjudications and juvenile delinquency proceedings. N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 720.35; N.Y. Fam. Ct. Act §§ 375.2, 380.1.
These provisions are part of a broad public policy of protecting those who have been charged but not convicted, or convicted of minor offenses, from the collateral consequences arising from any criminal record. In response to a lawsuit, in August 2007 the Office of Court Administration ceased providing information on minor violation convictions. See N.Y.L.J. at 1, col. 5 (Aug. 10, 2007); OCA website: https://www.nycourts.gov/apps/chrs/faqs.shtml#faqfunction.
G. Juvenile records
If a delinquency procedure terminates in favor of the juvenile, the court must immediately order the sealing of records, unless the interests of justice require otherwise. N.Y. Fam. Ct. Act § 375.1(1). “If an action has resulted in a finding of delinquency . . . other than a finding that the respondent committed a designated felony act, the court may, in the interest of justice and upon motion of the respondent, order the sealing of appropriate records pursuant to [§ 375.1].” § 375.2(1).
Youthful offender (ages 16 to 19) records are sealed automatically upon adjudication. N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 720.35(2). A 2021 law allows an person who was denied youthful offender status by the sentencing court to apply to the court for a new determination after at least five years have passed since the imposition of the sentence, or, if the individual was sentenced to a period of incarceration, latest release from incarceration, provided that the person has not been convicted of any new crime since the imposition of sentence. § 720.20.
H. Limits on background check returns
1. “Undisposed cases” – five-year lookback
In 2019, a new § 845-C was added to the New York Criminal Procedure Code to prohibit the division of criminal justice services (DCJS) from including in background check reports any information on “undisposed cases” (defined to mean records not indicating a final disposition, and for which “no entry has been made in the criminal history records for a period of at least five years”). In all cases involving serious offenses the DA must be asked if a matter is still pending, but if the DA fails to respond within six months, the information shall be excluded. Exceptions for “qualified agencies,” and for federal and state law enforcement, and for bona fide research purposes. A qualified agency is defined in § 835(9) to include courts, law enforcement and correctional agencies, and agencies with investigative functions. See S1505 (2020 Budget), Part II, subpart L (p. 45).
Similarly, in the case of court records, the Office of Court Administration is also prohibited from including “undisposed case” information in background checks (those where no entry has been made in the court docket for five years), except for internal record-keeping or research purposes. Id. The exceptions for law enforcement and qualified agencies that apply to DCJS do not apply to court records.
2. Convictions and pending cases only in civil reports
A new § 845-D prohibits DCJS and the Office of Court Administration from reporting “for civil purposes” any records other than convictions and pending criminal actions, with the same exceptions as apply to reporting of “undisposed cases” above. Id. subpart N (p. 47).
I. Judicial and administrative certificates
A Certificate of Relief from Disabilities (CRD), N.Y. Correct. Law §§ 701-703, or a Certificate of Good Conduct (CGC), §§ 703-a, 703-b, may be obtained from the sentencing court or from the the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision (DOCCS) (formerly the Parole Board) to restore certain rights, and may be limited to one or more specific rights. Their purpose is to effectuate the public policy of encouraging the licensure and employment of convicted individuals. See People v. Adams, 747 N.Y.S.2d 909 (2002). The Certificate of Good Conduct dates from the 1940s, and the Certificate of Relief from Disabilities was added in 1966 with the support of Governor Rockefeller as an aid to rehabilitation as opposed to recognition of it.6 A 2011 amendment to the law authorizing certificates of relief from disabilities is intended to require courts to consider this relief for eligible individuals at sentencing. See infra. New York practitioners claim that the certificate program is of limited value, in part because some courts are disinclined to certify rehabilitation as early as sentencing, and in part because employers and others are unwilling to rely on them. See scholarly articles, discussed elsewhere on this site, describing certificates as “frequently inaccessible to their intended beneficiaries and misunderstood both by the officials tasked with issuing them and the employers and licensing boards that should be giving them effect.” New York certificates fall short in practice, https://ccresourcecenter.org/2016/02/29/new-york-certificates-of-relief-fall-short-in-practice/.
Both types of certificate are given effect under Article 23-A of the Corrections Law as evidence of rehabilitation. See discussion below.
For a review of the frequency of certificate relief from both the courts and correctional agencies, see CCRC’s report on certificates of relief, “Positive Credentials That Limit Risk: A Report on Certificates of Relief” (June 2024).
Eligibility
1. Certificate of Relief from Disabilities
A CRD is available to people with no more than one felony conviction and any number of misdemeanor convictions, either from the sentencing court (for misdemeanor convictions and for felony convictions if no prison term is imposed), or from the the DOCCS (for persons sentenced to prison under New York law or who reside in New York but were convicted in another jurisdiction, including federal). N.Y. Correct. Law §§ 700(1)(a), 703(1). Under § 701(1) a CRD may be granted
to relieve an eligible offender of any forfeiture or disability, or to remove any bar to his employment, automatically imposed by law by reason of his conviction of the crime or of the offense specified therein. Such certificate may be limited to one or more enumerated forfeitures, disabilities or bars, or may relieve the eligible offender of all forfeitures, disabilities and bars. Provided, however, that no such certificate shall apply, or be construed so as to apply, to the right of such person to retain or to be eligible for public office.
The court may issue a CRD at the time sentence is pronounced, in which case it may grant relief from forfeitures as well as from disabilities, or at any time thereafter. § 702(1). The DOCCS may issue a CRD at any time after release from prison. § 703(1)(a). A CRD is also available to people with convictions from other jurisdictions, including federal convictions, who reside or do business in New York, or at any time thereafter. If issued prior to expiration of supervision, it is deemed temporary, and may be revoked. § 703(4). It is important to seek a CRD at sentencing in order to avoid public housing and employment bars. The Court or DOCCS must find that the issuance of a CRD is “consistent with the rehabilitation of the eligible offender,” and “consistent with the public interest.” §§ 702(2), 703(3).
2. Certificate of Good Conduct
A CGC is available to people with multiple felony convictions from the DOCCS after a waiting period of one to five years, depending on the seriousness of the offense(s). N.Y. Correct. Law §§ 703-b(1), (3). A Certificate of Good Conduct is also available to persons convicted outside New York, including federal offenses. § 703-b(2). It is granted only if the person has demonstrated “good conduct” for the requisite period and if (like the CRD) granting relief would be “consistent with the rehabilitation of the eligible offender” and “consistent with the public interest.” § 703-b(1). If granted during a period of parole, the CRD is temporary, and it may be revoked at any time until the Board’s jurisdiction is ended. If not revoked, it becomes permanent at the conclusion of parole supervision.
Persons convicted in jurisdictions outside New York State must in addition demonstrate “that there exist specific facts and circumstances, and specific sections of New York state law that have an adverse impact on the applicant and warrant the application for relief to be made in New York.” § 703-b(2).
Effect
Certificates issued under either N.Y. Correct. Law § 703 (CRD) or § 703-b (CGC) have essentially the same effect: they relieve an eligible person of “any forfeiture or disability,” and “remove any barrier to . . . employment that is automatically imposed by law by reason of conviction of the crime or the offense.” §§ 701(1), 703-a. (The CRD statute contains certain exceptions that apparently do not apply to CGCs, as described in the section on “public office,” below.) A certificate may be limited to particular disabilities, and the relief may be enlarged by the court or Board of Parole at any time, to include firearms permits.
Neither type of certificate operates on the conviction like a pardon. § 706. (As noted above in IIA, gubernatorial pardons are rarely granted in New York State.) A CRD does not authorize a job applicant with a criminal record to deny on an employment application that he has ever been convicted of a crime. Nor does a certificate preclude employers or licensing agencies from relying on the conviction as a factor in denying or revoking a license or making other discretionary decisions, §§ 701(3), 703-a(3), but a certificate does create a “presumption of rehabilitation” that must be given some effect in deciding whether there is a disqualifying “direct relationship” between a crime and a job or license under Article 23-A of the New York Corrections Law discussed in Part III below. See §§ 752, 753(2) (Part III infra); see also, e.g., Adams, 747 N.Y.S.2d at 916 (CRD creates a “presumption of rehabilitation” and removes the automatic bar from obtaining a license, but does not establish a prima facie entitlement to the license; the licensing agency still maintains the ultimate control whether to grant the license.); Op. N.Y. Att’y Gen. (Inf.) 81-124 (1981).
These certificates, with certain exceptions, preclude reliance on the conviction as an automatic bar or disability, but they do not preclude agencies from considering the conviction as a factor in licensing or other decisions. N.Y. Correct. Law §§ 701(3), 703-a(3). Compare Meth v. Manhattan & Bronx Surface Transit Operating Auth., 521 N.Y.S.2d 54 (N.Y. App. Div. 1987) (transit authority improperly denied employment as a bus driver to man convicted of bribery, who had been granted certificate of relief from disabilities; authority presented no evidence of consideration of the eight factors to rebut the presumption of rehabilitation that the certificate of relief from disabilities creates) with Soto-Lopez v. N.Y. City Civil Serv. Comm’n, 713 F. Supp. 677 (S.D.N.Y. 1989) (dated manslaughter conviction alone was not directly related to a caretaker position nor did it pose an unreasonable risk to persons or property; however, unreasonable risk test met when combined with more recent conviction for sale of narcotics).
Public office: A CRD does not apply to “the right of such person to retain or to be eligible for public office.” N.Y. Correct. Law § 701(1). Nor does a CRD overcome automatic forfeiture resulting from convictions for violations of N.Y. Pub. Health Law § 2806(5) (nursing home operator’s license) or N.Y. Veh. & Traf. Law § 1193(f)(2) (driver’s license suspension). However, these exceptions do not appear in the statute authorizing issuance of CGCs. Therefore, a CGC would appear to be sufficient to overcome bars to public employment. Compare People v. Olensky, 91 Misc. 2d 225, 397 N.Y.S.2d 565 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1977) (Notary Public was a “public officer” so that CRD not sufficient to enable defendant to obtain a notary public commission and work as a court reporter) with N.Y. Exec. Law § 130 (executive pardon or CGC sufficient to overcome bar to notary public position for person with conviction). Accordingly, a person with a first offense who is eligible for a CRD must in addition obtain a CGC if he wishes to obtain certain kinds of public employment deemed to be a “public office,” or overcome the specific disabilities in the public health and vehicle codes. But see People v. Flook, 164 Misc. 2d 284, 285 (N.Y. Cnty. Ct. 1995) (noting that some licensing statutes require persons convicted of the designated crimes to obtain a CGC and others permit them to obtain either a CGC or a CRD, and finding no relevant distinction between the two statutes for purposes of restoration of firearms rights).
Firearms: Either type of certificate may restore firearm rights, except to those convicted of Class A-1 felonies or violent felonies, and this relief must be specified in the certificate. N. Y. Correct. Law §§ 701(2), 703-a (2).
Process
The application for a CRD from the New York courts is explained at http://www.nycourts.gov/courts/6jd/forms/dmv/DP-53.pdf, and from the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision (DOCCS) (formerly the Parole Board) at http://www.doccs.ny.gov/certrelief.html. The court may request an investigation from the probation service and a written report. N.Y. Correct. Law § 702(3). If a CRD is sought from the DOCCS Board, the process may take several months. See https://www.parole.ny.gov/pdf/parolecert.pdf. The certificate is temporary during the period of parole supervision, and becomes permanent thereafter if not revoked. “In granting or revoking a certificate of relief from disabilities the action of the board of parole shall be by unanimous vote of the members authorized to grant or revoke parole. Such action shall be deemed a judicial function and shall not be reviewable if done according to law.” § 703(5).
In August 2011 subsection (1) of N.Y. Correct. Law § 702 was amended to require a court, upon application, and prior to or at the time of imposing a sentence that does not involve commitment to state prison, to consider an individual’s fitness for a CRD. The memorandum accompanying this change in the law states that certificates are a “powerful tool [to] promote and encourage reintegration after a conviction,” but notes that they are “underutilized” and that “only a tiny fraction” of those eligible actually hold them. http://www.communityalternatives.org/pdf/2011-amend-Corr-L-702.pdf. This memorandum notes that the purpose of CRDs is to “prevent eviction, loss of a job and loss of an occupational license,” and that they may accordingly be issued “prior to an individual’s demonstration of proper conduct.” Id. New York practitioners report that some courts are reluctant to issue certificates at the time of sentencing because of their legal effect in establishing “rehabilitation” under Article 23A.
In addition, since 2005, certain prisoners may be eligible to receive a CRD upon parole. Under a DOCCS policy directive, correctional staff “shall prepare a certificate for each eligible incarcerated individual approved for release.” A CRD may be granted if the Superintendent reviews the individual’s record and decides that a certificate would be “consistent with the rehabilitation of the person” and “consistent with the public interest.” If granting the CRD would not be consistent with the person’s rehabilitation or the public interest, or if the individual has spent time in disciplinary confinement or lost any good time in the previous 12 months, the Superintendent must defer the certificate for 24 months. Several listed felonies, including sex offenses, kidnapping, hate crimes and terrorism, are excluded. Certificates of Relief from Disabilities Pre-Release, N.Y. Department of Corrections and Community Supervision Directive #8400, March 24, 2023.
The process for seeking a CGC is more demanding, since an applicant must satisfy the “good conduct” waiting period specified in § 703-b(3). The waiting period “shall be measured either from the date of the payment of any fine imposed upon him or the suspension of sentence, or from the date of his unrevoked release from custody by parole, commutation or termination of his sentence.” Id. The board “shall have power and it shall be its duty to investigate all persons when such application is made and to grant or deny the same within a reasonable time after the making of the application.” Vote is by the whole board, or of a unanimous three-member panel. § 703-b(1).
Presumption based on federal recommendation:
Where a certificate of relief from disabilities is sought . . . on a judgment of conviction rendered by a federal district court in this state and the department is in receipt of a written recommendation in favor of the issuance of such certificate from the chief probation officer of the district, the department shall issue the requested certificate, unless it finds that the requirements of paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of subdivision three of this section [regarding the rehabilitation of the applicant and the public interest] have not been satisfied; or that the interests of justice would not be advanced by the issuance of the certificate. N.Y. Correct. Law § 703(7).
Study of CRD efficacy
A 2020 study analyzed more than 1,000 background checks conducted by the New York Department of Health. Each case “received an initial denial and requested reconsideration by submitting evidence of rehabilitation.” Although approximately 20% submitted a CRD as evidence of rehabilitation, “decision makers here did not appear to view this as a particularly powerful or dominant piece of evidence.” Megan Denver, Criminal Records, Positive Credentials and Recidivism: Incorporating Evidence of Rehabilitation Into Criminal Background Check Employment Decisions, Crime & Delinquency, Vol. 66, Iss. 2.
Additional guidance
DOCCS maintains a website with application forms and frequently asked questions about its CRDs and CGCs. Additional information about the process for applying for a CRD or CGC is in Judge Gleeson’s opinion in Doe v. United States, 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29162 (E.D.N.Y. 2016). The Legal Action Center has prepared a very helpful booklet that explains in laymen’s terms how to get a record sealed and how to obtain certificates relieving disabilities, and the effect of these forms of relief. It includes a step-by-step guide to how a private individual can go about having their record sealed, including model letters and forms. See Legal Action Center, Lowering Arrest and Conviction Record Barriers (Updated 2024).
Frequency of grants
Judicial certificates: The New York Division of Criminal Justice Services, as well as most county courts, lack a centralized record of CRD applications and grants. One 2016 study of court-issued certificates estimated that “in most counties, fewer than 5 percent of people sentenced in a typical year are seeking certificates.” Alec Ewald, Rights Restoration and the Entanglement of US Criminal and Civil Law: A Study of New York’s “Certificates of Relief.” Law & Social Inquiry, 41(1) at12-15 (2016). See also New York certificates fall short in practice, CCRC Staff, February 29, 2016.
Correctional certificates: In 2001, an interview with a “gatekeeper” at the New York State Division of Parole, who handled “all inquiries and requests for certificates from the Parole Board,” revealed that “roughly 600 applicants begin the process [to apply for a certificate] each year, but that half drop out,” with certificates granted in 90% of the remaining cases. See Ex-Offenders and Employment: A Review of Maryland’s Public Policy and a Look at Other States, Homeless Persons Representation Project at 18, 50. (Dec. 2001).
Citing these statistics, a 2006 report of a New York State Bar Association committee later speculated that the relatively low number of certificates issued each year can be attributed to the fact that most people convicted of crimes are not informed about them. See Reentry and Reintegration: The Road to Public Safety, Report and Recommendations of the Special Committee on Collateral Consequences of Criminal Proceedings at 99-106 (May 2006).
However, the total number of all correctional certificates issued began to rise after a 2005 policy directive started to automate issuing CRDs to parolees. After 2015, more than three-quarters of all certificates issued by DOCCS were CRDs granted upon release.
For a review of the frequency of certificate relief from both the courts and correctional agencies, see CCRC’s report on certificates of relief, “Positive Credentials That Limit Risk: A Report on Certificates of Relief” (June 2024).
IV. Criminal record in employment, licensing & housing
A. New York State Human Rights Law
The New York State Human Rights Law, N.Y. Exec. Law § 296(16), prohibits, in connection with public and private employment, occupational licensing, housing, volunteering, providing credit, or providing insurance, from asking about, or acting adversely (i.e., denying employment or licensure) based on records from a case any arrest or criminal accusation of such individual “not then pending against that individual which was followed by a termination of that criminal action or proceeding in favor of such individual,” certain marijuana offenses, cases terminated as a youthful offender adjudication; or cases that resulted in a sealed conviction, including violations, infractions, and misdemeanors and felonies sealed under the 2009 Drug Law Reform Act (for individuals who successfully completed a diversion program). In 2019 orders adjourning an action “in contemplation of dismissal” were specifically added to § 296(16), and they were specifically not defined as “pending.” In 2019, housing and volunteer employment were added to the law, by S1505 (2020 Budget), Part II, subpart O.
The Human Rights Law does not distinguish between current employees and applicants for employment, but insofar as its protections apply only to accusations that are “not then pending” it appears to provide limited protection to current employees who are accused of crime.7 In addition, it does not apply to police or law enforcement jobs.
The Human Rights Act also incorporates Article 23-A of the Corrections Law to prohibit discrimination based on criminal record in employment (infra).
B. Article 23-A of the Corrections Law
Article 23-A of the Corrections Law (“Licensure and Employment of Persons Previously Convicted of One or More Criminal Offenses”) prohibits “unfair discrimination” against a convicted person by public and private employers and licensing entities, “except where a mandatory forfeiture, disability or bar to employment is imposed by law, and has not been removed by an executive pardon, certificate of relief from disabilities or certificate of good conduct.” N.Y. Correct Law § 750 et seq.
Article 23-A may be enforced through the courts or through the New York State Human Rights Law, discussed infra. N.Y. Exec. Law § 296(15).
Section 752 of Article 23-A makes it unlawful for public employers, occupational licensing authorities, and private employers with more than ten employees, to deny or terminate8 employment or licensure based on a previous conviction unless:
(1) there is a “direct relationship” between one or more of the previous criminal offenses and the specific license or employment sought; or
(2) the issuance of the license or the granting of the employment would involve an unreasonable risk to property or to the safety or welfare of specific individuals or the general public.
N.Y. Correct. Law § 752. The term “direct relationship” is defined as follows: “the nature of criminal conduct for which the person was convicted has a direct bearing on his fitness or ability to perform one or more of the duties or responsibilities necessarily related to the license or employment sought.” This prohibition does not apply if disqualification is mandated by law, and the person has not received a certificate of relief from disabilities or certificate of good conduct. § 751. Law enforcement positions are excluded from the definition of “employment” under this section. Id.
Section 753(1) provides that in making a determination under § 752 a public agency or private employer “shall consider” the following factors:
(a) the public policy of this state . . . to encourage the licensure and employment of all persons previously convicted of one or more criminal offenses;
(b) the specific duties and responsibilities necessarily related to the license or employment sought;
(c) the relation of the conviction to the applicant’s ability to perform his responsibilities;
(d) the time elapsed since offense;
(e) the age of the person at the time of offense;
(f) the seriousness of the offense;
(g) any information produced by the person, or produced on his behalf, in regard to his rehabilitation and good conduct; and
(h) the interest of the employer of protecting property, and the safety and welfare of individuals or the general public.
An employer’s failure to consider each of these factors may violate § 753. See Acosta v. Dep’t of Education of City of N.Y., 16 N.Y.3d 309, 320 (2011)(Department of Education acted arbitrarily when it failed to consider the documentation petitioner submitted which evidenced her education, rehabilitation and volunteer work over the 13 years since her teenage conviction for robbery, despite its policy of closely reviewing first time applicants; “it is difficult to conclude on this record that the ‘closer review’ purportedly applied here amounted to anything more than a pro forma denial of petitioner’s application on the basis of her prior criminal conviction,” without considering each of the eight factors set forth in § 753); Boone v. New York City Department of Education, No. 2016 NY Slip Op 26240 (Sup. Ct. 2016) (denying petitioner a security clearance for a position as a School Bus Attendant, without due regard to the factors set forth in Article 23-A, or petitioner’s CRD, was arbitrary and capricious). But see Arrocha v. Bd. of Educ. Of City of N.Y., 93 N.Y.2d 361 (1999) (Board of Education’s determination that teaching license applicant’s prior conviction for sale of cocaine came within statutory “unreasonable risk” exception to general rule that prior conviction should not place person under disability, was neither arbitrary nor capricious, where Board properly considered all statutory factors and determined that those weighing against granting license outweighed those in favor; age of conviction, applicant’s positive references and educational achievements, and presumption of rehabilitation were outweighed by teacher’s responsibility as role model and nature and seriousness of applicant’s offense.).
Certificates and “Presumption of Rehabilitation”: Section 753(2) provides that the public agency or private employer shall also give consideration to a Certificate of Relief from Disabilities or a Certificate of Good Conduct issued to the applicant, both of which are described in detail in Section III(I) above.9 “which certificate shall create a presumption of rehabilitation in regard to the offense or offenses specified therein.” This “presumption of rehabilitation” has been interpreted by the courts to apply in the employment of licensing context even where an applicant’s prior conviction is directly related to the license or employment sought. See Bonacorsa v. Van Lindt, 71 N.Y.2d 605, 612 (1988) (because presumption of rehabilitation applies even where there is a direct relationship, the agency or employer must consider statutory factors to determine whether that relationship is sufficiently attenuated to warrant issuance of license or employment). The authority of an agency to refuse a license based on conviction alone is discussed in La Cloche v. Daniels, 2006 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 9379; 235 N.Y.L.J. 118 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 2006).10
Section 754 provides that if an individual who was previously convicted of at least one offense was denied employment or licensure, the employer or licensing agency must provide a statement of reasons for the denial, if the individual so requests. Section 755 specifies the mode of enforcement (in case of public employer through a civil action, and private employer through division of human rights and commission on human rights).
Repeal of mandatory disqualification from licensure
In 2019 a variety of specific licensing schemes that imposed mandatory bars to licensure based on conviction, thus putting licensing decisions beyond the reach of Article 23-A, were modified to make licensing decisions discretionary and specifically subject to Article 23-A. See S1505 (2020 Budget), Part II, subpart A. Among the specific licenses are operation of games of chance, banking, education councils, notary public, work activity employer, and driving school.
C. Employment discrimination under Human Rights Law
The New York State Human Rights Law makes it an unlawful discriminatory practice to deny employment in violation of Article 23-A. See N.Y. Exec. Law § 296(15).
It shall be an unlawful discriminatory practice for any person, agency, bureau, corporation or association, including the state and any political subdivision thereof, to deny any license or employment to any individual by reason of his or her having been convicted of one or more criminal offenses, or by reason of a finding of a lack of “good moral character” which is based upon his or her having been convicted of one or more criminal offenses, when such denial is in violation of the provisions of article twenty-three-A of the correction law.
The Human Rights Law also authorizes filing a civil action in court against private employers. N.Y. Exec. Law § 297(9).
The Human Rights Law, as amended in 2019, provides protection for people with a criminal record independent of Article 23-A by prohibiting inquiry in connection with employment (including volunteer positions), housing, licensing, or “providing credit or insurance” about any non-conviction record no longer pending, including ACDs, about a record that has been sealed, or about a youthful offender adjudication. See N.Y. Exec. Law § 296(16). No person shall be required to divulge information about any such record. Id. The section excepts official inquiries relating to firearms and law enforcement employment.
Negligent hiring protections
The Human Rights Law also extends protections against negligent hiring lawsuits to employers who have “made a reasonable good faith determination” pursuant to the factors set forth in Article 23-A:
Further, there shall be a rebuttable presumption in favor of excluding from evidence the prior incarceration or conviction of any person, in a case alleging that the employer has been negligent in hiring or retaining an applicant or employee, or supervising a hiring manager, if after learning about an applicant or employee’s past criminal conviction history, such employer has evaluated the factors set forth in section seven hundred fifty-two of the correction law, and made a reasonable, good faith determination that such factors militate in favor of hire or retention of that applicant or employee.
D. Ban-the-Box
State employment
New York is one of the few states that does not have a ban-the-box law covering even public employment. In September 2015, Governor Andrew Cuomo announced plans to implement recommendations from the Council on Community Re-entry whereby applicants for competitive positions in state agencies would not be required to discuss or disclose prior convictions until an agency has interviewed the candidate and made an initial hiring decision. However, those plans never materialized.
New York City Fair Chance Act
The New York City Fair Chance Act prohibits most entities that employ individuals in New York City from asking about a job applicant’s conviction record or running a background check (including a simple internet search) until after a job offer is made. After making an offer, an employer may ask questions and conduct a background check but may then only revoke that offer after determining that hiring the individual would pose a risk to persons or property, or that the conviction history is directly related to the job. This determination must be made after evaluating the conviction history pursuant to Article 23-A. Should the employer seek to revoke the job offer, it must provide the applicant with an explanation of the decision together with a copy of any background check report used in the decision, and then must give the applicant three business days to respond. As amended in 2021, the FCA was expanded to cover current employees and to reach pending cases. The Fair Chance Act is enforced by the NYC Human Rights Commission, whose website includes helpful information on bringing complaints. It may also be enforced in New York State court. See Fair Chance Act, NYC Human Rights Comm’n.
E. Additional guidance
The Legal Action Center has prepared a helpful booklet, regularly updated, explaining in laymen’s terms what New York employers may and may not ask about a person’s criminal record, how a person should describe their record, and what rights people have to be free of job discrimination because of their criminal record. See Legal Action Center, Criminal Legal FAQs.
- Prior to enactment of S830B, on April 18, 2018, Governor Cuomo issued an executive order directing that all those being released from prison onto parole and those currently on parole “will be given consideration for a conditional pardon that will restore voting rights without undue delay.” The order directed the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision to submit a list of all those then on parole, and a similar list each month thereafter. “Each individual on the eligible list will be reviewed to determine whether he or she will be granted a pardon that will restore voting rights.” The order made clear the limited nature of pardon and noted that pardoned individuals could still apply for a Certificate of Relief from Disabilities for additional relief (see below). The statement accompanying the order noted that
Parole voting restrictions have a disproportionate impact on New Yorkers of color, with African Americans and Hispanic New Yorkers comprising 71 percent of the population so disenfranchised. Civic engagement is linked to reduced recidivism and this action will promote access to the democratic process and improve public safety for all New Yorkers.
In May 2018, more than 24,000 people on parole or other form of community supervision were granted pardons to permit them to vote.
- One in 2008 went to rapper Ricky Walters (to avoid deportation), see Kirk Semple, Hip-Hopper Is Pardoned by Governor, N.Y. Times (May 24, 2008); one in 2009 to Osvaldo Hernandez (to assist him in his effort to join the New York Police Department), see Al Baker, Soldier Says Pardon Buoys His Hopes for Police Career, N.Y. Times (Jan. 2, 2010); C.J. Chivers & William Rashbaum, Army Lets a Felon Join Up, but N.Y.P.D. Will Not, N.Y. Times (Jan. 6, 2008); and one in 2010 to Qing Hong Wu, to avoid deportation, see Nina Bernstein, Paterson Rewards Redemption with a Pardon, N.Y. Times (Mar. 6, 2010); Nina Bernstein, Judge Keeps His Word to Immigrant Who Kept His, N.Y. Times (Feb. 19, 2010). The last-mentioned case provided the impetus for the immigration pardon panel described below.
- See Anahad O’Connor, Spitzer Pardons Ex-Convict to Spare Him Deportation, N.Y. Times (Dec. 22, 2007)
- See John Kifner, No Joke! 37 Years After Death Lenny Bruce Receives Pardon, N.Y. Times (Dec. 24, 2003).
- NY CLS Exec § 835(9) defines “qualified agencies” as,
courts in the unified court system, the administrative board of the judicial conference, probation departments, sheriffs’ offices, district attorneys’ offices, the state department of corrections and community supervision, the department of correction of any municipality, the financial frauds and consumer protection unit of the state department of financial services, the office of professional medical conduct of the state department of health for the purposes of section two hundred thirty of the public health law, the child protective services unit of a local social services district when conducting an investigation pursuant to subdivision six of section four hundred twenty-four of the social services law, the office of Medicaid inspector general, the temporary state commission of investigation, police forces and departments having responsibility for enforcement of the general criminal laws of the state, the Onondaga County Center for Forensic Sciences Laboratory when acting within the scope of its law enforcement duties and the division of forensic services of the Nassau county medical examiner’s office when acting within the scope of its law enforcement duties.
- Legislative History of Certificate Statutes, Memorandum to Alan Rothstein, Corporate Counsel for the New York City Bar Association, from Danielle D’Abate, Summer Intern for the Legal Clinic for the Homeless, August 11, 2006 (on file with authors). See generally Joy Radice, Administering Justice: Removing Statutory Barriers to Reentry, 83 U. Colo. L. Rev. 715 (2012) (describing history and operation of the New York’s certificate statute).
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Respecting current employees accused of crime, the New York Legal Aid Society reports that
We generally advise that current employees whose cases are sealed prior to any adverse action being taken, based on the arrest, are entitled to the statute’s protection. But there is no clear authority as to whether the statute entitles persons who have been suspended to be restored to the “status quo ante” once the criminal case has been sealed. This is a major issue because many government employers and licensing agencies are electronically notified of their employees’ and licensees’ arrests, and frequently issue suspensions pending the outcome of the criminal case.
- Until 2007, current employees were not covered by Article 23A. S.1602/A.3208 extended the anti-discrimination protections to current employees and license holders but only if their convictions predate employment or licensure. The law does not protect individuals who lie on an employment application, or who are accused of committing a crime while employed.
- Certificate of Relief from Disabilities, N.Y. Correct. Law §§ 700-703, or a Certificate of Good Conduct, §§ 703-a, 703-b, may be obtained to restore certain rights, and may be limited to one or more specific rights. See discussion in Part III(I) above.
- The La Cloche case gained notoriety as an example of arbitrary and unreasonable agency action against a convicted person. See Clyde Haberman, He Did Time, So He’s Unfit to Do Hair, N.Y. Times, at B1 (Mar. 4, 2005); Jennifer Gonnerman, Banned From the Barbershop: The quiet death of a fighter for civil rights, The Village Voice (Nov. 9-15, 2005).