Newburgh City Court
(Newburgh Justice Court)
Orange County, New York
Hours of Operation:
Address:
300 Broadway
Newburgh, NY 12550
United States
Phone:
(845) 565-0421 (Criminal)
(845) 483-8100 (General and Traffic)
Fax:
(845) 483-8498 (Criminal)
(845) 565-0230 (Traffic)
GENERAL TRAFFIC TICKET AND CRIMINAL COURT INFORMATION
Newburgh is a city within Orange County, New York. It is a principal city of the Poughkeepsie Newburgh Middletown metropolitan area and located 60 miles north of New York City and 90 miles south of Albany directly on the Hudson River and adjacent to I-84 and Route 9W (generating many alleged traffic violation offenses). Newburgh City Court has preliminary jurisdiction over all criminal and traffic related cases arising out of incidents occurring within the City of Newburgh. Such cases are on the Court’s daily calendar as directed by the Court Clerk’s Office. The City Court has trial jurisdiction over all cases if the jail term that can be imposed does not exceed one year. The office of the Orange County District Attorney prosecutes criminal cases.
Cases charging the commission of a traffic infraction are filed in the Newburgh City Court if the alleged offense took place in the City’s jurisdiction. Traffic tickets prosecuted by City Attorney or local law enforcement officers. A plea of “not guilty” is required to either be timely filed with the court either by the motorist or their attorney if they so elect. There are basically two choices: a plea of “not guilty” which allows a defense to be presented in the case, versus, a plea of “guilty” which locks in a conviction of the offense “as charged” which closes the door on a negotiated resolution or trial.
In New York, an attorney may go to court on a motorist’s behalf without the motorist having to personally appear. The attorney may be able to negotiate a resolution for the motorist or set the matter down for a future trial date where the police officer is required to appear to testify and the defense puts on their case as well. On traffic infractions, trials are held before a judge or “bench”; not a jury.
In addition to fines and sur-charges imposed by the court, convictions for speeding tickets and other moving violations can create other problems for motorists, such as, increased insurance premiums and a New York State Department of Motor Vehicles Driver’s Responsibility Assessment – additional fines or assessments owed directly to DMV based upon a motorist’s point accumulation. Additionally, eleven (11) points accumulated with eighteen (18) months will result in a license suspension or revocation depending upon one’s record of conviction. See Point Chart below:
NUMBER OF POINTS ASSIGNED BY DMV FOR COMMON TRAFFIC OFFENSES
License Violation Points
VIOLATION |
POINTS |
Speeding (MPH over posted limit) | |
1 to 10 |
3 |
11 to 20 |
4 |
21 to 30 |
6 |
31 to 40 |
8 |
Over 40 |
11 |
Reckless driving |
5 |
Failed to stop for school bus |
5 |
Followed too closely (tailgating) |
4 |
Inadequate brakes (private car) |
4 |
Inadequate Brakes (employer’s vehicle) |
2 |
Failed to yield right-of-way |
3 |
Disobeying traffic control signal, STOP sign or YIELD sign |
3 |
Railroad crossing violation |
5 |
Improper passing, changing lane unsafely |
3 |
Driving left of center, in wrong direction |
3 |
Leaving scene of property damage incident |
3 |
Child safety restraint violation |
3 |
Improper cell phone use |
5 |
Use of portable electronic device (“texting”) |
5 |
Any other moving violation |
2 |