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Theft vs Larceny vs Robbery vs Burglary New York

Thanks for visiting Federal Lawyers – managed by our lead attorney, a second-generation law firm with over 40 years of combined experience. You took someone’s phone without permission. Prosecutors could charge that conduct four different ways depending on the circumstances: petit larceny (misdemeanor, up to 1 year), grand larceny (felony, up to 25 years if high value), robbery (felony, up to 25 years if you used force), or burglary (felony, up to 25 years if you entered a building intending to steal). Same phone. Same defendant. Wildly different sentences based solely on which label prosecutors choose to attach to your conduct.

New York doesn’t use “theft” as a statutory crime – it’s larceny. Theft and larceny mean the same thing, just different words. But robbery and burglary are distinct crimes with different elements, and prosecutors exploit the overlapping definitions to charge defendants with the most serious offense that plausibly fits. At Federal Lawyers – we force prosecutors to prove every element of the charge they file, because the difference between “you took property” (larceny) and “you used force to take property” (robbery) can mean 24 additional years in prison.

Larceny: The Baseline Property Crime

Larceny means taking, obtaining, or withholding someone else’s property with intent to deprive them of it. That’s it. No force required. No breaking and entering. No victim presence necessary. You saw an unattended laptop at a coffee shop, you took it, you intended to keep it – that’s larceny. Petit larceny (property value $1,000 or under) is a Class A misdemeanor carrying up to 364 days. Grand larceny (value exceeds $1,000) escalates to felonies ranging from Class E (up to 4 years) to Class B (up to 25 years) depending on value thresholds.

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Prosecutors love grand larceny charges because they can inflate property values. Stole a used iPhone worth maybe $400 on the secondary market? Prosecutors claim it’s worth $1,100 based on original retail price, bumping petit larceny to felony grand larceny. Your defense attorney should demand proof of actual value – not replacement cost, not retail price when new, but fair market value of the specific item in its used condition at the time of theft. Prosecutors rarely provide appraisals. They cite retail prices and hope defendants plead guilty before challenging valuations.

Intent to Deprive

Larceny requires intent to deprive the owner of property permanently or substantially. If you borrowed something intending to return it, that’s not larceny – it’s unauthorized use, a lesser offense. But how do prosecutors prove you intended permanent deprivation versus temporary use? They infer it. You took the item and left? Intent to deprive. You didn’t return it within hours? Intent to deprive. You sold it or pawned it? Definitely intent to deprive. Defense requires showing your conduct was consistent with borrowing – you contacted the owner about returning it, you kept it in good condition, you had a history of borrowing and returning similar items. Without affirmative evidence of intent to return, juries assume taking equals intent to keep.

Todd Spodek
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Todd Spodek

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Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," Todd Spodek brings decades of high-stakes criminal defense experience. His aggressive approach has secured dismissals and acquittals in cases others deemed unwinnable.

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Robbery Adds Force

Robbery is larceny plus force or threat of force. Same property-taking, but you used physical force or threatened immediate physical injury to accomplish it. Robbery is always a felony regardless of property value – even stealing a $5 wallet becomes robbery if you shoved the victim or threatened them. New York recognizes three degrees:

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Todd Spodek
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Todd Spodek

Managing Partner

With decades of experience in high-stakes federal criminal defense, Todd Spodek has built a reputation for aggressive, strategic representation. Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," he has successfully defended clients facing federal charges, white-collar allegations, and complex criminal cases in federal courts nationwide.

Bar Admissions: New York State Bar New Jersey State Bar U.S. District Court, SDNY U.S. District Court, EDNY
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