YES! depending on the circumstances the court can decide to try a 17 yaer old as an adult in an assault case
Yes, it is POSSIBLE.
Yes, a weapon is a weapon.
Certainly: If you are found to be in possession at the time you are arrested for robbery, you may be charged with both offenses. Whether or not the prosecutors office will choose to charge you with both offenses is up to them. They may very well choose to leverage one of the charges for a guilty plea to the other one. .
If a juvenile commits aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon, he is likely to be charged as an adult. The possible sentence would depend upon what state the crime was committed in.
In Texas the crime of aggravated robbery is considered a Felony in the 1st degree. Jail time for aggravated robbery in Texas is anywhere from 5 to 9 years.
Piracy, armed robbery, aggravated robbery, and highway robbery. There are other subcategories to each of these.
Aggravated robbery is the same as simple robbery but with the addition of either a dangerous weapon or bodily harm inflicted upon a person in the course of the robbery. The harm does not have to be inflicted upon the victim. The maximum prison term for an aggravated robbery is 247 months or approximately twenty (20) and a half years. The specific Kansas law that makes aggravated robbery an unlawful activity is K.S.A. 21-3427.
There are numerous criminal charges one could be charged with. One could be charged with battery, manslaughter, assault, DWI, DUI, fraud and armed robbery.
Aggravated robbery is the same as simple robbery but with the addition of either a dangerous weapon or bodily harm inflicted upon a person in the course of the robbery. The harm does not have to be inflicted upon the victim. The maximum prison term for an aggravated robbery is 247 months or approximately twenty (20) and a half years. The specific Kansas law that makes aggravated robbery an unlawful activity is K.S.A. 21-3427.
Get yourself a good lawyer.
Can the state of texas pick up a robbery case and make it aggravated after getting to prison?
This depends on the exact charges brought, and the prior record of the person charged.
It depends. They might describe the same event. Armed robbery means you had a gun, aggravated robbery means there was an aggravating factor or something that made the robbery worse. Using a gun is probably one of them. Specific aggravating factors for a crime in each state can be found in state statutes.