NYSentencing

§ 420.05   Seizure and forfeiture of equipment used in the production
of unauthorized recordings.
  1.  Any  police  officer  of  this  state  may seize any equipment, or
components, used  in  the  manufacture  or  production  of  unauthorized
recordings  and  may seize any vehicle or other means of transportation,
other than a vehicle or means of transportation used by any person as  a
common  carrier  in  the transaction of business as such common carrier,
used in the  distribution  of  such  unauthorized  recordings  and  such
equipment  or  vehicle or other means of transportation shall be subject
to forfeiture as provided in this section.
  2.   The  seized  property  shall  be  delivered by the police officer
having made the seizure to the custody of the district attorney  of  the
county  wherein  the  seizure was made, except that in the cities of New
York, Yonkers and Buffalo, the seized property shall be delivered to the
custody  of the police department of such cities, together with a report
of all the facts and circumstances of the seizure.
  3.   It  shall  be  the  duty  of  the district attorney of the county
wherein the seizure was made, if elsewhere than in the city of New York,
Yonkers  or  Buffalo, and where the seizure is made in either such city,
it shall be the duty of the corporation counsel of the city, to  inquire
into  the  facts  of  the  seizure  so reported to him and if it appears
probable that a forfeiture has been incurred for  the  determination  of
which  the institution of proceedings in the supreme court is necessary,
to cause the proper proceedings to be commenced and prosecuted,  at  any
time  after  thirty  days  from  the  date  of  seizure, to declare such
forfeiture, unless, upon inquiry and examination such district  attorney
or  corporation counsel decides that such proceedings cannot probably be
sustained or that the ends of public justice do not  require  that  they
should be instituted or prosecuted, in which case, the district attorney
or corporation counsel shall cause such seized property to  be  returned
to the owner thereof.
  4.   Notice  of  the institution of the forfeiture proceeding shall be
served either:
  (a)  personally on the owners of the seized property; or
  (b)   by  registered  mail  to  the  owners' last known address and by
publication of the notice once a week for  two  successive  weeks  in  a
newspaper  published or circulated in the county wherein the seizure was
made.
  5.   Forfeiture  shall not be adjudged where the owners established by
preponderance of the evidence that:
  (a) the use of such seized property was not intentional on the part of
any owner; or
  (b)  said  seized  property was used by any person other than an owner
thereof, while such seized property was unlawfully in the possession  of
a  person  who  acquired possession thereof in violation of the criminal
laws of the United States, or of any state.
  6.   The  district attorney or the police department having custody of
the seized property, after such judicial  determination  of  forfeiture,
shall,  by  a  public  notice of at least five days, sell such forfeited
property at public sale.  The net  proceeds  of  any  such  sale,  after
deduction  of  the  lawful  expenses  incurred,  shall  be paid into the
general fund of the county wherein the seizure was made except that  the
net  proceeds  of the sale of property seized in the cities of New York,
Yonkers and Buffalo shall be paid into the respective general  funds  of
such cities.
  7.  Whenever any person interested in any property which is seized and
declared forfeited under the provisions of this  section  files  with  a
justice  of  the  supreme  court  a  petition  for  the recovery of such
forfeited property, the justice of the supreme court  may  restore  said
forfeited property upon such terms and conditions as he deems reasonable
and just, if  the  petitioner  establishes  either  of  the  affirmative
defenses  set  forth  in  subdivision  five of this section and that the
petitioner was without personal or actual knowledge  of  the  forfeiture
proceeding.   If  the  petition be filed after the sale of the forfeited
property, any judgment in favor of the petitioner shall  be  limited  to
the  net  proceeds  of such sale, after deduction of the lawful expenses
and costs incurred  by  the  district  attorney,  police  department  or
corporation counsel.
  8.  No suit or action under this section for wrongful seizure shall be
instituted unless such suit or action  is  commenced  within  two  years
after the time when the property was seized.