New York Statutes

§ 2005 — Further powers of judges; process and mandates

New York § 2005
JurisdictionNew York
Law UJCUniform Justice Court Act
Art. 20Criminal Jurisdiction and Procedure

This text of New York § 2005 (Further powers of judges; process and mandates) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
N.Y. Uniform Justice Court Act § 2005 (2026).

Text

§ 2005. Further powers of judges; process and mandates.\n The court shall have the power and jurisdiction to send processes and\nother mandates in any matter of which it has jurisdiction into any part\nof the county or any adjoining county, for service or execution, as\nprovided by the criminal procedure law; and particularly to compel the\nattendance of witnesses, to order the conditional examination of\nwitnesses within or without the state, to inquire into the sanity of a\ndefendant and to dismiss the prosecution of an action conformably to the\nprovisions of the criminal procedure law, and to punish for criminal\ncontempt a person guilty thereof in the manner and subject to the\nlimitations prescribed for courts of record by the judiciary law.\n

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Bluebook (online)
New York § 2005, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/statute/ny/UJC/2005.