1. How Does New York Define the Stalking Statute of Limitations?
New York Penal Law establishes distinct deadlines based on the stalking degree.
For stalking in the fourth degree, a Class B misdemeanor, the statute of limitations is two years from the date of the last act.
For stalking in the third degree, also a misdemeanor, the same two-year window applies.
Stalking in the second degree, classified as a felony, carries a five-year statute of limitations.
Stalking in the first degree, the most serious felony stalking charge, also has a five-year window.
Why the Distinction between Misdemeanor and Felony Timelines Matters
The difference between a two-year and five-year deadline can be decisive in whether charges proceed. Prosecutors must gather evidence, interview witnesses, and decide on charges before the clock expires. For first-degree stalking cases involving threats of serious physical injury or repeated contact with intent to cause fear, the extended five-year period provides more investigative opportunity. Conversely, fourth-degree stalking cases, which involve reckless conduct causing fear, face a compressed timeline that can affect how thoroughly prosecutors can develop their case.
2. When Does the Statute of Limitations Clock Start and Stop?
The statute of limitations begins on the date the last alleged stalking act occurs, not when the victim first reports the conduct or when police initiate an investigation. This distinction is crucial because a pattern of stalking involving multiple contacts means the clock resets with each new act. If an accused person makes threatening calls on January 1 and then again on March 15, the statute of limitations period begins on March 15 for a two-year misdemeanor or five-year felony offense.
How Prosecution Tolling Affects the Timeline
Once a criminal complaint or indictment is filed, the statute of limitations is tolled, meaning the clock stops running. This protects the prosecution's ability to proceed even if years pass during trial preparation or adjudication. However, if charges are dismissed and refiled, the original statute of limitations date may still apply, depending on whether the dismissal was with or without prejudice. Courts in New York apply strict tolling rules, and prosecutors must ensure charges are filed within the applicable deadline, or they face potential dismissal on statute of limitations grounds.
3. What Procedural Risks Arise When Deadlines Are Tight?
In high-volume criminal courts, particularly in New York County Criminal Court and similar tribunals, delayed documentation of the last stalking incident or incomplete verified complaints can create exposure to statute of limitations defenses. If notice of the alleged conduct is not properly recorded or if investigators cannot establish the exact date of the final act with precision, prosecutors may face challenges proving the complaint was timely filed.
Documentation and Notice Considerations for Prosecutors
Prosecutors must ensure the complaint clearly identifies the dates of alleged stalking conduct and explicitly states the date of the last act. Vague allegations or incomplete victim statements can complicate efforts to prove timeliness. From a practitioner's perspective, cases involving repeated contact over months or years require careful chronological documentation to avoid disputes over whether the statute of limitations has expired. Defense counsel frequently raises statute of limitations arguments when the record does not clearly establish the final act date, which is why prosecutors must prioritize clear, dated evidence in the charging documents.
4. How Do Related Offenses Affect Stalking Statute of Limitations?
Stalking charges often overlap with harassment, menacing, and cyberstalking conduct. Each offense carries its own statute of limitations, and prosecutors may pursue multiple charges with different deadlines running simultaneously. Harassment in the second degree, for example, has a two-year misdemeanor statute of limitations, while cyberstalking statutes may have their own timeframes depending on the specific conduct alleged.
Relationship to Prostitution and Solicitation Offenses
While stalking is distinct from prostitution or solicitation offenses, patterns of conduct can sometimes involve overlapping criminal behavior. For reference on related statutes of limitations, practitioners should review the statute of limitations for prostitution and the statute of limitations for solicitation to understand how different offense categories are treated under New York law. Understanding these parallel frameworks helps prosecutors and defense counsel assess the full scope of potential charges and their respective deadlines.
5. What Strategic Considerations Should Guide Charging Decisions?
Prosecutors must evaluate whether to charge stalking alone or in combination with related offenses before the statute of limitations expires. A defendant who engages in repeated threatening contact faces exposure to multiple charges, each with its own deadline. Charging decisions made near the statute of limitations deadline should account for the strength of evidence regarding the final act date, the availability of witnesses, and the likelihood of conviction on each degree of stalking charged.
Practitioners handling these cases should ensure that victim statements, police reports, phone records, and other evidence clearly establish a chronological record of alleged conduct. If the last act cannot be reliably dated, prosecutors may face significant risk that a statute of limitations defense will succeed. Similarly, if charges are dismissed prematurely, refiling may be barred if the original deadline has passed. Documentation of the investigation timeline, witness availability, and evidentiary development before the statute of limitations expires protects against procedural dismissal and ensures the prosecution has preserved its right to proceed on the merits.
08 May, 2026









