Across 6,422 Criminal Possession of Stolen Property cases in New York, 53.1% of defendants were released on their own recognizance (ROR) and 10.3% had bail set at a median of $10. 0.5% were remanded to custody. 27.8% of cases were disposed at arraignment. Bail outcomes vary across 32 New York counties with sufficient data.

Bail decision refers to the arraignment outcome: ROR (released without bail), bail set (monetary bail required), remanded (held without bail), or disposed at arraignment (case resolved immediately). Data sourced from New York DCJS Pretrial Release Data. Last updated: March 2026

Someone you know arrested for Criminal Possession of Stolen Property? A defense attorney can argue for lower bail or ROR at arraignment — often within hours.

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53.1%
Released (ROR)
10.3%
Bail Set
0.5%
Remanded
$10
Median Bail Amount

How Criminal Possession of Stolen Property bail decisions compare across New York counties. Click a county for detailed bail data.

County ROR % Bail Set % Remanded % Median Bail Cases
Queens 36.6% 5.0% 0.6% $1 1,110
Kings 55.8% 7.1% 0.1% $1 1,049
New York 41.2% 6.4% 0.1% $1 896
Bronx 48.4% 3.5% 0.0% $1 719
Westchester 76.6% 14.8% 0.9% $250 337
Suffolk 74.2% 18.6% 0.3% $5 306
Onondaga 67.2% 14.5% 1.6% $5 186
Erie 60.9% 23.4% 3.3% $500 184
Richmond 48.9% 7.3% 0.0% $1 178
Nassau 60.8% 12.7% 0.0% $100 166
Monroe 49.5% 17.1% 0.0% $50 105
Oneida 67.3% 15.3% 0.0% $100 98
Chautauqua 48.8% 17.1% 0.0% $1 82
Albany 48.1% 16.5% 1.3% $2,250 79
Niagara 57.9% 30.3% 0.0% $100 76
Oswego 75.7% 12.9% 4.3% $1 70
Broome 73.2% 12.5% 0.0% $500 56
Orange 52.8% 30.2% 0.0% $750 53
Chemung 72.3% 25.5% 0.0% $1 47
Cortland 77.8% 17.8% 0.0% $1 45
Cattaraugus 52.3% 27.3% 0.0% $1 44
Cayuga 70.7% 22.0% 4.9% $1 41
Clinton 63.4% 14.6% 0.0% $175 41
Tompkins 53.7% 22.0% 2.4% $1 41
Jefferson 63.2% 28.9% 2.6% $1,000 38
Rensselaer 75.8% 3.0% 0.0% $1 33
St. Lawrence 56.2% 21.9% 0.0% $250 32
Steuben 74.2% 16.1% 0.0% $50 31
Dutchess 51.7% 27.6% 0.0% $100 29
Schenectady 59.3% 14.8% 0.0% $1 27
Saratoga 61.5% 3.8% 3.8% 26
Madison 90.5% 9.5% 0.0% $500 21

Source: New York DCJS Pretrial Release Data (2019–2024) — NewYorkCourtFile.com

New York enacted significant bail reform in 2019, eliminating cash bail for most misdemeanors and nonviolent felonies. The law was amended in 2022 to expand the list of bail-eligible offenses and give judges more discretion. The data above spans 2019–2024, capturing outcomes before, during, and after these reforms. Arraignment decisions depend on the specific charge, the defendant's history, and the judge's assessment under CPL §510.10. Every case is unique — past outcomes do not predict future results.

How we calculate bail rates: We analyze the bail_decision field from DCJS Pretrial Release records. Cases with missing or "Unknown" bail decisions are excluded. Median bail amounts are calculated from cases where bail was set and the amount is greater than zero. County breakdowns require a minimum of 20 cases. Data from DCJS Pretrial Release Data, last updated March 2026.

Statistics from public court records for informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Past outcomes do not predict future results.

Based on 6,422 cases, 53.1% of Criminal Possession of Stolen Property defendants were released on their own recognizance (ROR), 10.3% had bail set, and 0.5% were remanded to custody. The specific outcome depends on the charge details, the defendant's history, and the judge's discretion under CPL §510.10.
When bail is set for Criminal Possession of Stolen Property, the median amount is $10. Amounts vary by county and case specifics. A defense attorney can argue for lower bail or release without bail at arraignment.
Yes. Criminal Possession of Stolen Property bail outcomes vary across New York's 62 counties. Counties like Queens (36.6% ROR) and Kings (55.8% ROR) show different patterns. Differences reflect local judicial practices and case mix. See the county table above for details.

Data source: New York DCJS Pretrial Release Data. 6,422 Criminal Possession of Stolen Property cases with bail decisions analyzed. Last updated March 2026. — NewYorkCourtFile.com

Someone you know arrested for Criminal Possession of Stolen Property? A defense attorney can appear at arraignment to argue for release — often the same day.

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