The answer is "loot."
Stolen goods
In a charge of robbery it is not the amount of money that was stolen. It is the METHOD by which the robbery was accomplished. (Force & Violence - Knife - Gun - weapon of NY type - etc.)
Not necessarily. In that the word means "by chance or by accident," I suppose it could describe a robbery that occurred by that means, HOWEVER, in common usage the word "fortuitous" is usually associated with GOOD things happening to someone.
$41,600 in gold coins
loot
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).
In most cases, if you are robbed and your money is stolen, you may not be able to recover the stolen money. It is important to report the robbery to the authorities and your bank to try to minimize the loss.
The police are investigating a recent robbery that occurred at the local convenience store.
Lute... or Loot, depending on which one you'd like!
'Nusumareta' is "stolen."
A 'formal' charge. You can be indicted for armed robbery or you can be charged with armed robbery.