Criminal Defense
NY Penal Law § 470.15: Money Laundering in the Second Degree
max@dotcomlawyermarketing.com
Legal Expert
4 min read
Updated: Sep 6, 2025
For the purpose of concealing proceeds from criminal activity such as drug dealing, gambling, fraud or theft, people who are involved in such criminal activity frequently take steps to make it look as though the money was obtained through legal transactions. This is known as money laundering. Money laundering is commonly employed not only by those involved in drug trafficking, illegal gambling, and prostitution, but some elected officials have even been known to be involved in money laundering in an effort to conceal the real source of campaign financies. There are eight different crimes that cover money laundering in the New York penal code. Money laundering in the first degree is one of the two most egregious money laundering offenses in the New York criminal code. You could be prosecuted under New York Penal Law § 470.20 for money laundering in the first degree if you:
- Are aware that a financial transaction represents the proceeds of criminal conduct and you:
- Carry out at least one financial transaction with intent to carry on the criminal activity or with intent to violate federal tax legislation,
- Carry out at least one financial transaction with the awareness that it was designed to hide the nature, location or control of the criminal activity
- Carry out at least one financial transaction that is designed to avoid necessary transaction reporting and the amount of the transaction or transactions is greater than $50,000
- Are aware that at least one money instrument represents the proceeds of criminal conduct and you transport the money instrument with intent to:
- Promote carrying on the criminal activity
- Conceal the nature, location or control of the criminal activity
- Avoid transaction reporting and the amount of the money instrument or instruments is greater than $100,000 combined.
- Perform at least one financial transaction that:
- Involves property that is the proceeds of criminal activity or property that was used to carry out or facilitate criminal activity with intent to promote that activity,
- Conceal the nature, location or control of the activity or
- Avoid transaction reporting and the transaction or transactions is greater than $100,000.
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