Under PL § 240.35 (Loitering), 98.9% of 1,043 cases statewide were dismissed and 1.1% resulted in conviction, based on 2024–2025 OCA arraignment data across 6 New York counties.

Dismissal rate includes judicial dismissals and cases dismissed in the interest of justice. Conviction rate includes guilty pleas and findings of guilt at trial. Loitering is classified as a Violation under New York law. Data sourced from the NYS Office of Court Administration (OCA) STAT Act. Covers criminal court arraignments in 2024–2025, updated monthly. Last updated: March 2026

1,043
Total Cases
98.9%
Dismissal Rate
1.1%
Conviction Rate
6
Counties

See also: All Disorderly Conduct charges (DCJS data, 2019–2024) for pretrial release, bail, and charge reduction data.

What the Data Shows

Loitering (PL § 240.35) is a Violation under New York law. Based on 1,043 arraignments across 6 counties in 2024–2025:

  • Dismissal rate: 98.9% of cases are dismissed statewide, though rates vary significantly by county
  • Conviction rate: 1.1% of cases result in conviction, including guilty pleas and trial verdicts
  • Geographic variation: Click any county below for specific fines, sentencing breakdowns, and dismissal reasons

These statistics reflect aggregate outcomes and do not predict individual case results. For legal guidance, consult a licensed New York attorney.

Outcomes by County

County Cases Dismissal Rate Conviction Rate
Queens 431 99.8% 0.2%
New York 205 99.0% 1.0%
Kings 194 97.9% 2.1%
Bronx 154 98.7% 1.3%
Suffolk 34 93.8% 6.2%
Richmond 25 100.0% 0.0%

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

PL 240.35 is the New York statute for Loitering, classified as a Violation. Based on 1,043 arraignments in 2024–2025, 98.9% of cases are dismissed and 1.1% result in conviction.
Outcomes for Loitering vary across 6 New York counties. Click any county in the table above for detailed statistics including sentencing, fines, and demographic breakdowns.
This data comes from the New York State Office of Court Administration (OCA) STAT Act data, covering criminal court arraignments in 2024–2025. The data is updated monthly, generally on the 6th of each month. For guidance on your case, consult a licensed New York attorney.

Data source: NYS OCA-STAT Act (2024–2025). 1,043 cases analyzed. Last updated March 2026. — NewYorkCourtFile.com

Facing a Loitering charge? Get connected with a defense attorney experienced with PL 240.35 cases.

Talk to a New York Attorney — Free Free · No obligation · Confidential