Minimum of 10 years depending the property & items stolen
Burglary is a felony offense. If sentenced to prison you will spend at least one year.
For as long as you are sentenced. The problem lies in sentencing guidelines. These can vary due to a number of variables.
Considering that just to place the bugs you would be entering their house WITH a criminal intent, you are committing Burglary - a felony. Anything you did after that would simply be another charge added on to the felony Burglary charge you already have.
3 strikes=25-life
There are various levels of burglary charges. You can hope to get probation and not go to jail for a burglary charge in SC if you do not have a record.
It is usually treated as such. In the U.S., most states have generally treated either burglary committed at night or of an inhabited dwelling or both as a serious felony, akin to a violent crime. In California, for example, burglary of any inhabited dwelling (including boats and trailers, with "inhabited" meaning currently used for habitation, whether occupied or not) is "first-degree burglary" and is punishable by two to six years in prison, whereas any other burglary (second-degree) is considered a "wobbler" (chargeable as either a misdemeanor or a felony, punishable by up to a year in jail or prison). Compare this to robbery, which is two to nine years in prison, depending on degree and circumstances. Residential burglary, like robbery, presents risks of violence to the victim (a struggle could result, a victim could be hurt or killed to silence them if they raise an alarm or call for help), and so it is generally treated as violent, as robbery likewise is even if violence is only threatened and not actually used. In the Supreme Court case of James v. United States (2007), the Court ruled that "attempted burglary" is a violent felony for the purposes of the federal Armed Career Criminal Act, which mandates a 15-year prison term for a felon with three prior drug-related or violent felony convictions who is found in possession of a firearm.
It is almost 100% certain that he will serve the remainder of his sentence (on which he received probation) in jail, PLUS whatever sentence he may receive after being tried on the new offense. There is also the real possibility he will be sentenced as an habitual offender, which in some jurisdictions will double his sentence.
It is perfectly legal as long as you're wearing a backwards baseball cap. This loophole really only works in states like Massachusetts. Happy burglaring!
well more or less... you're done son...
If it was a burglary of a dwelling then it can carry a sentence of 3 to 25 years in penitentiary, burglary of church up to 14 years in penitentary, burglary of a non-dwelling or auto is up to 7 years, burglary with exposives 5 to 40 years in penitentiary. If it was a robbery up to 15 years in penitentary, armed robbery is up to life WITHOUT parole.
how long did bisphop eddie long serve in prison
Life!!