Criminal Defense
NY Penal Law § 470.05: Money Laundering in the Fourth Degree
max@dotcomlawyermarketing.com
Legal Expert
4 min read
Updated: Sep 6, 2025
In New York, the procedure you undertake in order to conceal criminal activity can amount to a crime. One of these offenses is referred to as money laundering. Money laundering entails transforming financial gains from criminal activity into what appears to be legally earned funds. There are eight offenses related to money laundering in the New York criminal code. They are money laundering in the first, second, third and fourth degrees, and money laundering in support of terrorism in the first, second, third and fourth degrees. The particular charge that you will face depends on the amount of money involved in the act and your purpose for the money laundering. You could be prosecuted under New York Penal Law § 470.05 for money laundering in the fourth degree if you are aware that a financial transaction represents the proceeds of criminal conduct and you:
- Perform at least one financial transaction with intent to continue the criminal conduct or with intent to violate federal tax legislation,
- Perform at least one financial transaction being fully aware that it was designed to shroud the nature, location or control of the criminal conduct
- Perform at least one financial transaction that is intended to avoid required transaction reporting and the amount of the transaction or transactions is over $5000 in total
- Promote carrying on the criminal activity
- Keep secrete the nature, location or control of the criminal activity
- Avoid transaction reporting and the amount of the pecuniary instrument or instruments is over $10,000.
- Involves property that is the proceeds of criminal conduct or property that was used to conduct or facilitate criminal conduct with intent to promote that conduct,
- hide the nature, location or control of the conduct or
- avoid transaction reporting and the transaction or transactions exceeds $10,000.
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