Disorderly Conduct in Warren County
218 cases · Warren County Courts · DCJS Data
Disorderly conduct cases in Warren County end in conviction at a notably high rate compared to the rest of the state. With 89.6% of the 218 cases resulting in conviction, Warren County's outcomes diverge sharply from the statewide average dismissal rate of 27.1%. Warren County dismisses only 9.9% of these cases, placing it 17.2 percentage points below the state average. This gap reflects how the county's courts and prosecutors handle disorderly conduct charges, and the trend is moving in a tougher direction—dismissal rates have fallen from 16.7% in 2019 to 9.8% by 2024.
Most defendants charged with disorderly conduct in Warren County experience pretrial detention or bail, with 29.3% remanded without release and 28.3% facing bail set at a median of $1,000. Among those convicted, jail sentences are most common at 43.6% of outcomes, followed by fines at 18.4%. However, charge reductions are frequent: 76.1% of cases see the original charge reduced, predominantly to criminal contempt in 83.2% of those reductions. Cases reach resolution within roughly four months, with a median of 120 days to disposition.
Dismissal rate includes judicial dismissals and cases dismissed in the interest of justice. Conviction rate includes guilty pleas and findings of guilt at trial. Avg duration measures arraignment to final disposition. Data sourced from New York DCJS Pretrial Release Data. Last updated: March 2026
Case Outcomes
Source: 218 public court records, Warren County Courts — NewYorkCourtFile.com
Outcomes by Charge Class
How outcomes differ by felony and misdemeanor classification for Disorderly Conduct in Warren County.
| Charge Class | Cases | Dismissal Rate | Conviction Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| E Felony | 196 | 4.9% | 94.4% |
| A Misdemeanor | 14 | 38.5% | 61.5% |
| B Misdemeanor | 5 | 80.0% | 20.0% |
Charge class reflects the severity classification at arrest (e.g., A Felony is the most serious, B Misdemeanor the least). Outcomes vary by class due to differing prosecutorial priorities, plea bargaining patterns, and case complexity. Source: New York DCJS Pretrial Release Data.
Year-Over-Year Trends
How Disorderly Conduct outcomes in Warren County have changed over time.
| Year | Cases | Dismissal Rate | Conviction Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2019 | 13 | 16.7% | 75.0% |
| 2020 | 21 | 11.1% | 88.9% |
| 2021 | 36 | 9.7% | 90.3% |
| 2022 | 33 | 6.9% | 93.1% |
| 2023 | 47 | 9.8% | 90.2% |
| 2024 | 68 | 9.8% | 90.2% |
Year reflects arrest year from DCJS Pretrial Release Data. Case volumes may vary as more recent cases may still be pending disposition.
Pretrial Release
How defendants charged with Disorderly Conduct in Warren County are handled at arraignment.
Pretrial release data reflects arraignment outcomes under New York's bail reform laws. ROR = Released on Own Recognizance. Bail Set = cash bail or bond required. Remanded = held without bail.
Charge Reductions
in Warren County are reduced
Sentencing When Convicted
Breakdown of sentencing outcomes for Disorderly Conduct convictions in Warren County.
76.1% of Disorderly Conduct cases in Warren County are reduced to lesser charges. An attorney can review your situation — free, no obligation.
Ask a Warren County attorney — freeOutcomes by Demographics
Case outcome rates by race for Disorderly Conduct in Warren County. These statistics reflect systemic patterns and structural factors in the criminal justice system, not individual behavior.
| Race | Cases | Dismissal Rate | Conviction Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| White | 173 | 11.8% | 87.5% |
| Black | 28 | 0.0% | 100.0% |
| Hispanic | 12 | 10.0% | 90.0% |
Disparities in case outcomes reflect well-documented systemic factors including policing patterns, socioeconomic inequality, and structural bias in the criminal justice system. These statistics should not be used to draw conclusions about any individual or group. Data sourced from DCJS Pretrial Release Data.
Common Questions
Statistics from public court records for informational purposes only. Not legal advice. Past outcomes do not predict future results. Consult a licensed attorney for guidance on your case.
Data source: New York DCJS Pretrial Release Data. 218 cases analyzed for Disorderly Conduct in Warren County. Last updated March 2026. — NewYorkCourtFile.com
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