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New York Assault Defense

New York Assault in the Third Degree Lawyer

Assault in the third degree is a New York misdemeanor assault charge based on physical injury. The prosecution may rely on intentional injury, reckless injury, or criminally negligent injury by means of a deadly weapon or dangerous instrument.

ChargeAssault in the Third Degree
StatutePenal Law 120.00
LevelClass A misdemeanor
Maximum Exposureup to 364 days in jail

What Is Assault in the Third Degree in New York?

Assault in the third degree is a New York misdemeanor assault charge based on physical injury. The prosecution may rely on intentional injury, reckless injury, or criminally negligent injury by means of a deadly weapon or dangerous instrument.

Assault pages that only list the Penal Law section miss the real battleground. The CJI structure shows what prosecutors must prove: injury level, mental state, causation, identity, weapon or dangerous-instrument use, and any aggravating circumstance that raises the degree.

Elements Prosecutors Must Prove Under the Jury Instructions

The New York Criminal Jury Instructions break assault into separate theories. Each theory has different proof requirements and different defense pressure points.

Penal Law 120.00(1): physical injury with intent

For this theory, the People generally must prove the following beyond a reasonable doubt:

  1. The defendant caused physical injury to another person.
  2. The defendant did so with intent to cause physical injury to that person or another person.
  3. Physical injury means impairment of physical condition or substantial pain.

Penal Law 120.00(2): reckless physical injury

For this theory, the People generally must prove the following beyond a reasonable doubt:

  1. The defendant caused physical injury to another person.
  2. The defendant acted recklessly by consciously disregarding a substantial and unjustifiable risk that physical injury would occur.
  3. The risk and disregard must represent a gross deviation from the standard of conduct a reasonable person would observe.

Penal Law 120.00(3): criminal negligence with a weapon or dangerous instrument

For this theory, the People generally must prove the following beyond a reasonable doubt:

  1. The defendant caused physical injury to another person by means of a deadly weapon or dangerous instrument.
  2. The defendant acted with criminal negligence by failing to perceive a substantial and unjustifiable risk.
  3. The failure to perceive the risk must be a gross deviation from the standard of care a reasonable person would observe.

Key Assault Definitions

Physical Injury

Physical injury means impairment of physical condition or substantial pain. The defense may challenge whether the claimed pain or condition meets the legal threshold.

Serious Physical Injury

Serious physical injury involves a substantial risk of death, death, serious and protracted disfigurement, protracted impairment of health, or protracted loss or impairment of an organ function.

Intent

Intent means conscious objective or purpose. The issue is often whether the accused intended the legally required injury, not simply whether an encounter occurred.

Recklessness

Recklessness requires awareness and conscious disregard of a substantial and unjustifiable risk that constitutes a gross deviation from reasonable conduct.

Criminal Negligence

Criminal negligence is more serious than civil negligence and involves failing to perceive a substantial and unjustifiable risk in a way that grossly deviates from reasonable care.

Deadly Weapon / Dangerous Instrument

A dangerous instrument can be an ordinary object, including a vehicle, if used or threatened in a way readily capable of causing death or serious physical injury.

Example Scenario

A realistic example is a bar, street, school, workplace, or domestic-related accusation where someone claims pain or injury after a shove, punch, fall, object, or chaotic struggle. The defense should examine whether there was a legally sufficient physical injury, whether the injury was caused by the accused, whether intent or recklessness can be proven, whether self-defense applies, and whether video or witnesses tell a different story.

The example shows why an assault charge should be reviewed by elements, not labels. Injury proof, medical records, causation, mental state, object use, self-defense, and witness context can change the degree or defeat the charge.

Potential Sentencing and Consequences

Assault in the Third Degree is a class a misdemeanor. The maximum exposure is up to 364 days in jail. Assault allegations can also create orders of protection, employment and licensing problems, immigration exposure, school or Title IX consequences, firearms consequences, family-court overlap, and reputational harm.

Defense Issues to Examine Immediately

Proof and Injury Defenses

  • The injury may not meet the physical-injury or serious-physical-injury threshold.
  • Medical records, photographs, or reports may not support the charged degree.
  • The prosecution may not prove causation or who caused the injury.
  • The required intent, recklessness, criminal negligence, or depraved-indifference theory may be missing.
  • Self-defense, defense of another, or accident may apply.

Evidence and Procedure Defenses

  • Video, body-camera footage, 911 calls, and phone/location data should be preserved quickly.
  • Statements, identifications, searches, or alleged weapon evidence may be suppressible.
  • Witness accounts may be inconsistent or incomplete.
  • Expert review may help with medical causation, injury severity, or forensic issues.
  • Grand jury advocacy may reduce or prevent felony charges.

Related Assault, Violence, and Criminal Defense Pages

Assault allegations often overlap with strangulation, gang assault, robbery, weapons, domestic violence, orders of protection, and broader criminal-defense issues.

Official Legal References

This page is structured around Penal Law 120.00 and New York Courts CJI materials, including NY Courts CJI Article 120 index, NY Courts CJI Assault 3 intent, NY Courts CJI Assault 3 reckless, NY Courts CJI Assault 3 criminal negligence.

How Lebedin Kofman LLP Approaches Assault in the Third Degree Cases

Lebedin Kofman LLP focuses on early factual development, medical and injury proof, video and witness preservation, causation, self-defense, suppression issues, grand jury strategy, and collateral consequences.

See our representative cases and media coverage and client reviews for additional context about the firm’s work. Every case is different, and past outcomes do not guarantee a similar result.

Talk to a New York Assault in the Third Degree Defense Lawyer

Assault allegations can affect bail, orders of protection, employment, licensing, immigration, firearms rights, family issues, education, and reputation. Early defense work can preserve video, medical records, witness context, self-defense facts, and suppression issues before the prosecution theory hardens.

Lebedin Kofman LLP represents clients in Brooklyn, Manhattan, Queens, Bronx, Staten Island, Nassau County, Suffolk County, and federal matters around the United States. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.

Assault in the Third Degree FAQ

Is assault in the third degree a felony or misdemeanor in New York?

Assault in the Third Degree is a class a misdemeanor under Penal Law 120.00. The exposure, bail risk, and collateral consequences depend on the subdivision charged, injury proof, criminal history, and defense strategy.

What does the prosecution have to prove for assault in the third degree?

The prosecution must prove the exact statutory theory charged under Penal Law 120.00. That can involve physical injury, serious physical injury, intent, recklessness, criminal negligence, weapon or dangerous-instrument use, protected-person status, felony-related injury, or other statutory aggravators.

What evidence matters most in assault cases?

Important evidence can include medical records, photographs, surveillance video, body-camera footage, 911 calls, witness accounts, phone/location data, alleged weapon evidence, prior relationship context, and statements.

Can self-defense apply to assault charges?

Yes, depending on the facts. Self-defense, defense of another, accident, lack of intent, lack of injury, causation problems, misidentification, and suppression issues can all matter.

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