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Petty Theft in California — A Misdemeanor With Real Consequences

Proposition 47 reclassified petty theft as a misdemeanor for most defendants, and that change is frequently misread as making the charge inconsequential. It isn't. A petty theft conviction still creates a criminal record, still affects employment background checks, and still carries enhanced penalties for any future theft offense. For someone whose livelihood depends on a clean record — a teacher, a nurse, a security professional — a misdemeanor theft conviction can be as damaging as the criminal sentence itself. At the Law Office of Nic Cocis, we defend petty theft charges in Murrieta and throughout Southwest Riverside County and treat the record consequence as seriously as the charge.

Defending Petty Theft Charges in Murrieta and Southwest Riverside County

Penal Code § 484 and the $950 Threshold

California Penal Code § 484 defines theft as the taking of another's property with the intent to permanently deprive them of it. Petty theft under § 488 applies when the value of the property taken is $950 or less. The $950 threshold was established by Proposition 47 in 2014 and dramatically reduced the number of theft offenses charged as felonies.

A first-offense petty theft conviction carries up to six months in county jail and a fine of up to $1,000. In practice, first-time offenders rarely receive jail time — probation, community service, and fines are the typical outcome. But the conviction itself is what matters most for many clients.

Petty theft with a prior — Penal Code § 666 — elevates a petty theft charge when the defendant has specified prior theft or related convictions. Certain prior convictions — sex offenses requiring registration, violent felonies, prior § 666 violations — can elevate a subsequent petty theft to a felony. The escalating consequence of prior theft convictions is one reason why first-offense petty theft cases deserve serious attention from the start.

What the Prosecution Must Prove

Every petty theft charge requires the prosecution to establish taking, carrying away, the property of another, without consent, and with specific intent to permanently deprive. The intent element is where most petty theft defenses are built. A person who took an item by mistake, who believed they had permission, or who intended to return it hasn't formed the specific intent the statute requires. These arguments aren't guaranteed to succeed, but they're legally sound and factually available in more cases than defendants typically realize.

The Southwest Justice Center handles a significant volume of theft matters arising from Murrieta's retail corridor along Winchester Road and the surrounding commercial areas. Nic Cocis has appeared in these courts for over 25 years and knows how these cases are evaluated locally.

How We Can Help with Petty Theft Charges

The defense depends on the facts. For cases where the evidence is strong, the focus shifts to outcome — diversion, civil compromise, or a resolution that keeps the conviction off the record. For cases where the facts present a genuine defense, we contest the charge directly.

Challenging the intent to permanently deprive element
Pursuing civil compromise under Penal Code §§ 1377–1378 where the victim agrees
Evaluating diversion options for first-time offenders
Contesting the value determination where it’s near the $950 threshold
Advising on prior conviction exposure under § 666
Pursuing expungement after conviction where applicable

What to Expect When You Work with Us

01

Facts and Intent Analysis

We examine the circumstances of the alleged taking — what happened, what was observed, and what the defendant's actual state of mind was. Intent defenses require facts, and we build the record around them.

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02

Civil Compromise

For first-time petty theft offenses where the victim is a private individual or business, civil compromise under Penal Code §§ 1377–1378 can result in dismissal of the criminal charge entirely. We evaluate civil compromise eligibility in every appropriate case.

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03

Diversion

Diversion programs for first-time theft offenders — whether through the court or the store's civil recovery process — can resolve the matter without a criminal conviction. We identify every available non-conviction pathway before recommending a plea.

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04

Record Outcome Focus

For clients whose employment or professional licensing depends on a clean record, the outcome matters more than the sentence. A dismissal through civil compromise, diversion, or successful defense is the goal — not just minimizing the fine.

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Why Choose the Law Office of Nic Cocis?

Record Consequence Focus

Treats the employment and licensing impact of a conviction as seriously as the criminal penalty

Civil Compromise Experience

Has used §§ 1377–1378 to achieve dismissal in appropriate petty theft cases

Southwest Justice Center Familiarity

25+ years of Riverside County court experience

Multilingual Services

English, Romanian, and Spanish available

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Under California law, theft is complete once a person takes possession of property with the intent to permanently deprive — even before leaving the store. Concealment of merchandise, movement past the final point of sale, or bypassing the checkout area can all establish the completed taking. Being stopped before leaving the store means the merchandise was recovered, which often affects how seriously prosecutors pursue the charge and whether civil compromise or diversion is available. It doesn't make the charge disappear.

It may affect how the prosecution approaches the case, but it doesn't eliminate the charge. A petty theft is a misdemeanor regardless of value — even a single dollar. The low value may make the prosecution more receptive to diversion or civil compromise, but a conviction is still a conviction. The record consequence is the same at $20 as it is at $900.

It can significantly. A prior theft or related conviction — particularly a prior § 666 violation or a specified felony — can elevate a new petty theft charge to an enhanced misdemeanor with up to a year in county jail, or in some circumstances to a felony. We review the prior conviction record at the beginning of every case to understand the actual exposure before any strategy is set.

Facing Petty Theft Charges in Murrieta?

Contact the Law Office of Nic Cocis for a consultation. We serve clients in Murrieta, Temecula, Menifee, Lake Elsinore, Wildomar, Winchester, Canyon Lake, French Valley, and throughout Southwest Riverside County.

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