
Robbery Charges in California Don't Leave Much Room for Error
Robbery is always a felony. Always a strike. And the sentencing ranges — two to nine years in state prison depending on degree, with enhancements for weapons and multiple victims — make it one of the most serious property crime charges in California's criminal code. The prosecution doesn't need to prove the amount taken. They need to prove force or fear in connection with the taking. That element — and who had what intent, when — is where robbery defenses are built. At the Law Office of Nic Cocis, we have defended robbery charges at the Southwest Justice Center and throughout Southwest Riverside County for over 25 years.
Facing a Robbery Charge in Murrieta? Here's What You Need to Know.
How Penal Code § 211 Defines Robbery
Force or fear.
The taking must be accompanied by force or fear sufficient to overcome the victim’s resistance. The force or fear doesn’t have to be severe — courts have found robbery where the defendant merely pushed past a victim while grabbing property. But the force must be in connection with the taking, not incidental to it. A fight that occurs separately from the theft, or force used only to escape after a completed theft, doesn’t automatically convert the theft into robbery.
From the person or immediate presence.
Robbery requires taking property from another person’s body or immediate presence — within their reach, observation, or control. Property taken from a room while the victim is in another part of the building may not satisfy the immediate presence element.
Against their will.
The victim must not have consented to the taking. Consensual transactions, even ones that go wrong, don’t satisfy this element.
First and Second Degree — What Changes the Charge
First-degree robbery.
§ 212.5(a) and (b) applies to robbery of an inhabited dwelling, robbery of a person using an ATM or who just used one, and robbery of a transportation operator (bus driver, taxi driver, Uber driver). It carries three, four, or six years in state prison.
Second-degree robbery.
§ 212.5(c) covers all other robbery. Two, three, or five years in state prison.
Both degrees are strikes. Both carry a great bodily injury enhancement of three to six years under Penal Code § 12022.7 if the victim was injured. Using a firearm adds ten, twenty, or twenty-five-to-life consecutive under § 12022.53.
How We Can Help with Robbery Charges
The defense in a robbery case is built on the force or fear element, the immediacy of the taking, and in many cases, the identification of the defendant as the person who committed the offense.
Contesting the force or fear element where the facts support it
Challenging eyewitness identification through cross-examination and expert testimony
Examining surveillance footage and physical evidence for identification issues
Pursuing charge reduction from robbery to theft where force wasn’t connected to the taking
Contesting weapon and injury enhancement allegations
Advising on strike consequences and their effect on sentencing
What to Expect When You Work with Us
Why Choose the Law Office of Nic Cocis?
Strike Consequence Defense
Understands that robbery convictions carry long-term Three Strikes implications
Identification Challenge Experience
Has contested eyewitness identification in robbery and other serious crimes
Former DA’s Office Intern
Knows how robbery cases are built and where they can be challenged
Multilingual Services
English, Romanian, and Spanish available
Frequently Asked Questions
Facing Robbery 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.




