Forgery and Document Crimes Defense
New York Penal Law 170.25 Criminal Possession of a Forged Instrument in the Second Degree Lawyer
Lebedin Kofman LLP defends clients facing New York Penal Law 170.25 allegations in New York state courts and related federal, forfeiture, licensing, immigration, and reputational matters. These cases often depend on what the government can actually prove about intent, knowledge, possession, value, identity, records, and the charged statutory degree.
What Prosecutors Must Prove
Using the New York statutory framework and the Criminal Jury Instructions approach, prosecutors must prove each element beyond a reasonable doubt. For this offense, the core proof issues include:
- knowledge that the instrument was forged;
- intent to defraud, deceive, or injure another;
- possession or uttering of the forged instrument;
- proof that the instrument fits a second-degree statutory category, such as certain official, public, commercial, financial, or legal instruments.
The government still has to prove the case with admissible evidence. Suspicion, business disputes, account records, possession of property, or association with another person are not enough unless the required mental state and statutory elements are proven.
How This Charge Can Come Up
This charge may involve checks, deeds, public records, government documents, commercial papers, financial instruments, or other documents prosecutors say were forged and knowingly possessed or used.
These cases often start before an arrest through subpoenas, audit letters, detective calls, insurer or bank inquiries, search warrants, electronic account records, surveillance, or interviews. Early defense work can protect statements, preserve helpful evidence, and keep the case from being framed only through the prosecution’s version of events.
Defense Issues
- No knowledge the document was forged.
- No intent to defraud or injure.
- The document does not fit the charged statutory category.
- Possession was temporary, innocent, or not proven.
- Handwriting, digital, or business-record evidence is weak.
Depending on the facts, the defense may also involve suppression motions, subpoena challenges, forensic accounting, digital-forensics review, valuation analysis, witness investigation, restitution strategy, and negotiations designed to reduce criminal, licensing, employment, and immigration exposure.
Sentencing and Collateral Consequences
Criminal Possession of a Forged Instrument in the Second Degree Lawyer carries Class D felony exposure. The real-world consequences can also include restitution, forfeiture, orders of protection, professional discipline, employment consequences, immigration issues, business disruption, and reputational damage.
Why Contact Lebedin Kofman LLP
Russ Kofman and Lebedin Kofman LLP handle serious criminal matters, fraud investigations, federal cases, asset issues, Title IX matters, DWI cases, and sensitive allegations where careers and reputations are at stake. The firm works to identify proof problems early and position cases for dismissal, reduction, trial, or strategic resolution.
Before choosing a defense lawyer, review the firm’s client feedback, representative matters, and Russ Kofman’s profile.
Why People Call Lebedin Kofman LLP
When a criminal allegation, DWI arrest, federal investigation, Title IX matter, or high-stakes accusation can affect your freedom, license, job, education, immigration status, or reputation, you should be able to speak with a defense lawyer quickly and get a clear plan.
- Speak with a lawyer about an arrest, investigation, court date, order of protection, license consequence, or federal exposure.
- Get early guidance before speaking with police, prosecutors, school investigators, insurers, agencies, or employers.
- Review defense options including dismissal, reduction, suppression issues, trial posture, negotiation strategy, and collateral consequences.
Related Pages
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I speak to detectives, insurers, banks, or investigators?
Speak with defense counsel first. Statements made early can affect the entire case.
Can these cases become federal?
Yes. Fraud, stolen-property, identity, bank, wire, mail, health-care, and document allegations can overlap with federal investigations.
Can the case be reduced or dismissed?
That depends on the evidence, but defenses often focus on intent, knowledge, value, identification, admissibility, and whether the charged degree is overreaching.
Contact
If you are under investigation or charged, early defense strategy can change the direction of the case.
Source basis: NY Senate Penal Law 170.25; NY Courts CJI Article 170 framework. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Every case is unique and must be evaluated on its own facts and circumstances.
Criminal Possession of a Forged Instrument in the Second Degree: What Prosecutors Must Prove
NY Penal Law 170.25 - source framework: New York Criminal Jury Instructions for Criminal Possession of a Forged Instrument in the Second Degree.
- The prosecution generally must prove possession or uttering of a forged instrument.
- The People must prove both knowledge that it was forged and intent to defraud, deceive, or injure another.
- The instrument category matters. Defense issues may include innocent possession, lack of knowledge, lack of fraudulent intent, whether the document was actually forged, whether the accused knew its contents, surveillance or transaction proof, merchant or bank records, and unlawful search issues.
Second-degree possession allegations often involve checks, credit cards, prescriptions, public records, contracts, legal documents, or other specified instruments.
Forgery and forged-instrument cases often depend on intent, knowledge, document category, forensic proof, search issues, and how quickly counsel can intervene. The firm handles serious fraud and criminal-defense matters, has substantial review and case-result proof, and offers a free attorney consultation. Call 646-663-4430 so an attorney can speak with you quickly about protecting your record, career, license, immigration position, and reputation.