Criminal Defense
NY Penal Law § 145.45: Tampering with a Consumer Product in the First Degree
max@dotcomlawyermarketing.com
Legal Expert
3 min read
Updated: Sep 6, 2025
Since the early 1980's, a multitude of consumer products have specially designed caps and seals to stop people from tampering with what’s inside the package. Warning labels alert consumers that if a seal is broken or if the product packaging looks as though it has been tampered with, then they should not buy that particular item. Nevertheless, not every product can be made to be tamper-proof, and not every consumer is capable of recognizing when a product they are looking at has been tampered with. As a result of product tampering, people can be seriously injured or, in some circumstances, they could die. Both federal and state legislation exists that makes it illegal to tamper with consumer products. The term "Consumer products" encompasses any drug, food, beverage, or other product that is created to be ingested by people or to be applied to the external surface of a person’s body (skin, hair, nails, etc). You would have committed the crime of tampering with a consumer product in the first degree under New York Penal Law § 145.45 if:
- You engage in the act of altering, adulterating or otherwise contaminating any consumer product,
- In altering, adulterating or contaminating a consumer product, had the intention of injuring another person or instilling fear that injury might occur,
- You did not have the right to do so and
- In doing so, you create a substantial risk that someone will be seriously injured.
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