Yes, someone can be charged with assault and robbery if they physically attack and threaten force or violence to steal property from someone else. Each charge represents a different aspect of the crime, with assault focusing on the physical act of violence and robbery focusing on theft through force or intimidation.
Robbery is covered in Section 515 of the Kentucky Revised Statutes. KRS 515.020 is Robbery in the 1st Degree and KRS 515.030 is Robbery in the 2nd Degree. 515.030 states a person is guilty of Robbery in the Second Degree when, in the course of committing theft, he uses or threatens the immediate use of physical force upon another person with intent to accomplish the theft. Robbery in the Second Degree is a Class C Felony which carries 5 to 10 years of state time. Kentucky case law holds that a Robbery charge is appropriate for theft and for attempted theft, so long as force is used or threatened. Robbery in the 1st Degree requires physical injury, a weapon, or the use or threat of use of a dangerous instrument. Robbery 1 is a Class B felony which carries 10 to 20 years of state time.
Another name for theft is robbery, burglary, or larceny.
My teacher asked me to use robbery in a sentence. Outsourcing my homework to the internet is a form of intellectual theft, or, robbery.
theft/robbery
It depends on the specific circumstances and the jurisdiction. The most likely charges would be robbery, attempted robbery, theft, larceny, or attempted larceny depending on the exact details.
No. Robbery is robbery (i.e.: property was stolen or taken from you, personally, by physical violence or while being threatened with a weapon). Theft is is the same as Larceny (someone took property belonging to you while you were not present, or in control of it).
"Lutar" is a Punjabi word that means to plunder or loot. It is commonly used to describe acts of robbery or theft.
INTENT
skillful robberyanswer = Deft Theft
theft, robbery etc
Daylight stealing