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Heroin Trafficking Laws in New York: What You Need to Know

Thanks for visiting Federal Lawyers – a second-generation criminal defense firm managed by our lead attorney, with over 50 years of combined experience defending heroin trafficking cases throughout New York. Heroin trafficking carries some of the harshest penalties in New York’s criminal code. We’re talking mandatory minimum 15 years to life for selling two ounces or more under state law, and federal mandatory minimums of 5 to 10 years that kick in at even lower weights.

This article explains the weight thresholds that determine trafficking charges, the difference between state and federal prosecution, how prosecutors prove sales, and the enhanced penalties when heroin contains fentanyl or causes overdose deaths. We’re covering what matters when you’re charged with heroin trafficking.

Trafficking vs Possession: The Legal Distinction

Heroin trafficking means selling, exchanging, giving away, or disposing of heroin to another person under New York Penal Law Article 220. You don’t need to make money. Giving heroin to a friend for free counts as criminal sale.

Any heroin sale is a felony. There’s no misdemeanor trafficking charge. Selling a single bag of heroin – less than a gram – gets charged as fifth-degree criminal sale, a Class D felony with up to seven years in prison.

This differs from possession. Heroin possession can be a misdemeanor (under half an ounce without intent to sell) or a felony (half ounce or more, or any amount with intent to sell). But once prosecutors prove you sold heroin, you’re facing felony charges regardless of the amount.

The distinction matters because trafficking penalties are substantially harsher than possession at equivalent weights. Possessing two ounces of heroin is second-degree possession, a Class A-II felony with three to ten years mandatory minimum. Selling two ounces is first-degree sale, a Class A-I felony with fifteen years to life mandatory minimum.

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Weight Thresholds for Heroin Sale Charges

New York structures heroin sale charges into five degrees based on weight sold.

Fifth-Degree Sale: Any Amount

Class D felony. Maximum seven years. Applies to any measurable quantity. First-timers might avoid prison, but judges commonly impose one to three years.

Fourth-Degree Sale: School Zones or Specific Amounts

Class C felony. Three and a half to fifteen years. Applies when selling within 1,000 feet of schools. Fines up to $15,000.

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Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," Todd Spodek brings decades of high-stakes criminal defense experience. His aggressive approach has secured dismissals and acquittals in cases others deemed unwinnable.

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Third-Degree Sale: Half Ounce or More

Class B felony. Minimum five years with no priors, ten with prior drug felonies. Maximum twenty-five years. Applies when selling half ounce (14g) or more, or selling to anyone under 21. Fines up to $30,000. Prison mandatory.

Second-Degree Sale: Four Ounces or More

Class A-II felony. Three to eight years minimum, life maximum. Fines $1,000 to $50,000.

First-Degree Sale: Two Ounces or More

Class A-I felony. Mandatory minimum fifteen to twenty-five years. Maximum life. Fines up to $100,000. Major drug traffickers get fifteen to life with no parole for fifteen years.

Federal vs State Mandatory Minimums

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Todd Spodek

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With decades of experience in high-stakes federal criminal defense, Todd Spodek has built a reputation for aggressive, strategic representation. Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," he has successfully defended clients facing federal charges, white-collar allegations, and complex criminal cases in federal courts nationwide.

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