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New York Robbery Defense

New York Robbery in the Third Degree Lawyer

Robbery in the third degree is the baseline New York robbery charge. It requires forcible stealing: a larceny combined with the use or threatened immediate use of physical force for one of the purposes listed in Penal Law 160.00.

ChargeRobbery in the Third Degree
StatutePenal Law 160.05
LevelClass D felony
Maximum Exposureup to 7 years in prison

What Is Robbery in the Third Degree in New York?

Robbery in the third degree is the baseline New York robbery charge. It requires forcible stealing: a larceny combined with the use or threatened immediate use of physical force for one of the purposes listed in Penal Law 160.00.

Competitor pages commonly list the statutory aggravators. A stronger defense page has to do more: separate the core robbery element from each degree-specific theory and show what the People must actually prove under the Criminal Jury Instructions.

Elements Prosecutors Must Prove Under the Jury Instructions

Every robbery degree starts with forcible stealing. The prosecution must prove a larceny plus the use or threatened immediate use of physical force for a robbery purpose. The charged degree then adds the specific aggravating element.

Penal Law 160.05: forcible stealing

For this theory, the People generally must prove the following beyond a reasonable doubt:

  1. On or about the charged date, in the charged county, the defendant forcibly stole specified property from a person or owner.
  2. The prosecution must prove a larceny: wrongful taking, obtaining, or withholding of property from an owner.
  3. The prosecution must prove intent to deprive another of property or to appropriate it.
  4. The prosecution must prove the use or threatened immediate use of physical force for a robbery purpose.

Key Robbery Definitions

Forcible Stealing

Robbery means forcible stealing. The force or threatened immediate force must be used to compel delivery of property, overcome resistance to taking, overcome resistance to retention immediately after taking, or compel conduct that aids the larceny.

Larceny

The prosecution must prove wrongful taking, obtaining, or withholding of property from an owner with intent to deprive or appropriate.

Intent

Intent means conscious objective or purpose. Robbery cases often turn on whether force was used for a robbery purpose rather than in a separate dispute.

Physical Injury

Physical injury means impairment of physical condition or substantial pain.

Serious Physical Injury

Serious physical injury involves a substantial risk of death, death, serious/protracted disfigurement, protracted impairment of health, or protracted loss or impairment of an organ function.

Weapon and Firearm Display Issues

Some robbery theories require proof of a deadly weapon or dangerous instrument; others involve display of what appears to be a firearm, which can be litigated even when no real gun is recovered.

Example Scenario

A realistic example is an allegation that someone grabbed a phone or bag and shoved or threatened the owner to prevent resistance or keep the property. The defense would examine whether there was truly physical force or threat, whether any property was stolen, whether identity is reliable, whether video exists, and whether the facts are closer to larceny, harassment, or no crime.

The example is not a prediction about any case. It shows why robbery cases must be analyzed by elements: larceny, force, intent, identity, injury, weapon or object evidence, co-participant allegations, and whether the facts fit the charged degree.

Potential Sentencing and Consequences

Robbery in the Third Degree is a class d felony. The maximum exposure is up to 7 years in prison. Robbery charges can also involve violent-felony consequences, bail issues, orders of protection, immigration exposure, employment and licensing consequences, school impact, and reputational harm.

Defense Issues to Examine Immediately

Proof and Element Defenses

  • The alleged force may not have been used for a robbery purpose.
  • The proof may support larceny or assault allegations rather than robbery.
  • Identification may be unreliable or unsupported by video.
  • Injury, serious injury, or weapon allegations may be overstated.
  • Co-participant or actually-present theories may not fit the facts.

Evidence and Procedure Defenses

  • Surveillance, body-camera footage, 911 calls, and phone/location data should be preserved quickly.
  • Lineups, showups, statements, searches, or recovered property may be suppressible.
  • Medical records and photographs may undercut injury claims.
  • Weapon-display theories may fail if perception or conscious display cannot be proven.
  • Grand jury advocacy may reduce or prevent violent felony charges.

Related Robbery, Theft, Assault, and Weapons Pages

Robbery allegations often overlap with larceny, assault, burglary, weapons, and broader criminal-defense issues.

Official Legal References

This page is structured around Penal Law 160.05 and the New York Courts CJI materials, including NY Courts CJI robbery introductory charge, NY Courts CJI robbery third degree.

How Lebedin Kofman LLP Approaches Robbery in the Third Degree Cases

Lebedin Kofman LLP focuses on immediate evidence preservation, witness and video review, identification challenges, force and intent issues, injury/medical proof, weapon allegations, suppression, grand jury strategy, and collateral consequences.

See our representative cases and media coverage and client reviews for additional context about the firm’s work. Every case is different, and past outcomes do not guarantee a similar result.

Talk to a New York Robbery in the Third Degree Defense Lawyer

Robbery allegations can create bail pressure, violent-felony exposure, prison risk, orders of protection, immigration consequences, employment issues, and long-term reputational harm. Early defense work can preserve video, test identification, challenge force or injury allegations, and address weapon claims before the prosecution theory hardens.

Lebedin Kofman LLP represents clients in Brooklyn, Manhattan, Queens, Bronx, Staten Island, Nassau County, Suffolk County, and federal matters around the United States. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.

Robbery in the Third Degree FAQ

Is robbery in the third degree a felony in New York?

Robbery in the Third Degree is a class d felony under Penal Law 160.05. The sentencing exposure, bail risk, and collateral consequences depend on the facts, criminal history, and defense strategy.

What does forcible stealing mean?

Forcible stealing means a larceny plus the use or threatened immediate use of physical force for a robbery purpose: compelling delivery of property, overcoming resistance to taking, overcoming resistance to retention immediately after taking, or compelling conduct that aids the larceny.

What evidence matters in a robbery in the third degree case?

Important evidence can include surveillance video, body-camera footage, 911 calls, medical records, photographs, witness statements, identification procedures, phone/location evidence, recovered property, and weapon or object evidence.

Can robbery in the third degree be reduced?

Sometimes. Potential reductions depend on proof of forcible stealing, identification, injury or weapon evidence, co-participant allegations, video, suppression issues, complainant credibility, and negotiation posture.

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