NYSentencing

§ 60.02 Authorized disposition; youthful offender.
  When a person is to be sentenced upon a youthful offender finding, the
court must impose a sentence as follows:
  (1)  If the sentence is to be imposed upon a youthful offender finding
which has been substituted for a conviction of an offense other  than  a
felony,  the court must impose a sentence authorized for the offense for
which the youthful offender finding was substituted, except that if  the
youthful  offender  finding  was  entered  pursuant  to paragraph (b) of
subdivision one of section 720.20 of the  criminal  procedure  law,  the
court   must   not   impose  a  definite  or  intermittent  sentence  of
imprisonment with a term of more than six months; or
  (2) If the sentence is to be imposed upon a youthful offender  finding
which  has  been  substituted for a conviction for any felony, the court
must impose a sentence authorized to be imposed upon a person  convicted
of  a class E felony provided, however, that the court must not impose a
sentence of conditional discharge  or  unconditional  discharge  if  the
youthful  offender  finding was substituted for a conviction of a felony
defined in article two hundred twenty of this chapter.

  (3)  The  provisions of section 60.35 of this article shall apply to a
sentence imposed upon a youthful offender finding and the amount of  the
mandatory  surcharge  and  crime  victim  assistance  fee which shall be
levied at sentencing shall be equal to  the  amount  specified  in  such
section  for  the  offense of conviction for which the youthful offender
finding was substituted; provided, however  that  the  court  shall  not
impose  the  sex  offender registration fee, DNA databank fee or supple-
mental sex offender victim fee, as defined in subparagraphs (iv) and (v)
of paragraph (a) and paragraph (b) of subdivision one of  section  60.35
of  this article, for an offense in which the conviction was substituted
with a youthful offender finding.
(Repealed by L.2020 c.144 effective 08/24/20.)

  (4) Notwithstanding any other provision of law in this section, if the
sentence is to be imposed upon a youthful  offender  finding  which  has
been  substituted  for a conviction of prostitution or loitering for the
purposes of prostitution provided that the person does not stand charged
with loitering for the purpose of patronizing  a  prostitute,  and  such
offense  occurred when the person was sixteen or seventeen years of age,
the court must impose a sentence authorized to be imposed upon a  person
convicted  of  a  violation  as  defined in subdivision three of section
10.00 of the penal law and where the court imposes a revocable  sentence
authorized  for  a  violation  may order any of the specialized services
enumerated in title eight-A of article six of the social services law or
other  appropriate  services  made  available  to  persons  in  need  of
supervision in accordance with article seven of the family court act.