There is no way to know. It can be UP to 20 years in prison and a fine up to $10,000.
Using a bb gun would still make it robbery because it would reasonably "place another in fear of imminent bodily injury or death".
But it would not be aggravated robbery because a bb gun is not a deadly weapon.
Robbery in Texas is a second-degree felony punishable by 2 to 20 years in prison and a fine of up to $10,000. If a deadly weapon was used during the robbery, it can be upgraded to aggravated robbery, which carries a more severe punishment.
The convict was sentenced to ten years in prison for robbery.
In the United States the most commonly used word used for convict is inmate. Other words are prisoner, jailbird, or in jail. In addition sometimes expressions are used: he is in the clink, he is up the river, or he is on the chain gang.
the judge sentenced him to 5 years of jail
According to Wikipedia: "A heist is a term used to describe a robbery from an institution such as a bank or a museum, or any robbery in which there is a large haul of loot."
In common everyday conversation, the two terms are very often used interchangeably but, no, they are not the same. In "legalese": "Robbery" is a criome against a person, while "Burglary" is a crime against property. (e.g.: If someone sticks a gun in your face and takes your money, you suffered a 'robbery.' If someone breaks into your home when nobody is there and steals your TV, you have suffered a 'burglary.')
In English, the correct phrase is "convicted of." For example, one would say, "He was convicted of theft." The phrase "convicted for" is typically not used in legal contexts.
The verb form of robbery is "rob." It is used to denote the act of taking someone's property unlawfully and taking it away from them by force or threat.
No. Although the terms are used inter-changeably by most of the public - the crime of Robbery is a crime against a person. What the questioner describes is Burglary, which is a crime against property - UNLESS the home is occupied at the time of the break-in, THEN it becomes Robbery.
According to Wikipedia: "A heist is a term used to describe a robbery from an institution such as a bank or a museum, or any robbery in which there is a large haul of loot."
He used the invoice to pay his bill.
If you execute all prisioners, what use is a prisioner anyway, this question would never arise therefore no answer would be needed.