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If you are charged with robbery it’s very important that you seek professional legal assistance with your case. Robbery charges can carry very significant penalties should you be found guilty including lengthy prison sentences.
Your criminal lawyer may be able to identify a reasonable defence to your charge, or if there is no reasonable defence available to you your solicitor can ensure you receive the lowest possible penalties through a process of mitigation.
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Learn more about robbery charges in WA.
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FreePhone case assessment
Lets talk about your situation confidentially. We will discuss the alleged robbery in detail to understand what happened and be able to tell you if we can help or not. Get the process started now, by requesting a free call back.
Book appointment with our robbery lawyers
If it's clear consulting a solicitor you will help your situation, we can identify the right one for your case and arrange a convenient appointment for you. We will review any documents you send us, and brief the solicitor before you arrive to maximise your time with them.
In depth consultation
At your meeting the solicitor will be able to indicate the outcome they expect to achieve and the legal pathway they would take with you to ensure the best possible result based off past cases and experience. Possible defences will be explored and all of your questions answered.
Sound legal advice & pathway forward
Armed with sound legal advice and a fixed fee quote for respresentation throughout the process you can then decide if you would like them to act on your behalf to drop charges or represent you in court.
The sooner you act the better.
Leaving things to the last minute makes it more difficult for your legal team to obtain the best possible result.
Lawyers with robbery experience
Meet with lawyers who have successfully represented clients charged with robbery.
Robbery
Criminal code offence
Section 392
“A person who steals a thing and, immediately before, after or at the time of doing so, uses or threatens to use violence to any person or property in order to obtain the thing stolen, or to prevent or overcome resistance to its being stolen is guilty of a crime.”
Elements of the offence
What the Police & Prosecution must prove in court to secure a robbery criminal conviction
How they might prove this
The sooner you act the better.
Leaving things to the last minute makes it more difficult for your legal team to obtain the best possible result.
Lawyers with robbery experience
Meet with lawyers who have successfully represented clients charged with robbery.
If we can prove one of these defences together...
Consent
It may be argued that the person who owns the property you are alleged to have stolen actually consented to you taking the property. If this can be shown, it cannot be said that you took the property fraudulently.
Accident
A person is not criminally responsible for an event which occurs by accident. If it can be shown that the taking of the property was done by mistake, for example you didn’t know you had picked up someone’s property as well as your own, then you have not committed the crime of stealing. But, you may be subject to another offence related to the violence act or threat of violence. This is a difficult defence given that the onus is on the Prosecution to prove that you stole something and acted violently in order to do so. It is unlikely that there would be circumstances where someone would act violently to obtain something that was taken by mistake.
Insanity
Is a defence only in very rare circumstances. The usual process when a person indicates a defence of insanity is an assessment of their mental state and admission into psychiatric/mental health facilities for an indeterminable amount of time.
The sooner you act the better.
Leaving things to the last minute makes it more difficult for your legal team to obtain the best possible result.
Lawyers with robbery experience
Meet with lawyers who have successfully represented clients charged with robbery.
What’s taken into account if you’re found guilty...
Prison sentence
Ordinarily the maximum penalty that can be imposed by the Court is a term of imprisonment for up to 14 years.
If before or after the offence, the offender pretends to be or is armed with a dangerous weapon, and the offence is said to have occurred in circumstances of aggravation. The penalty in this regard can be up to life imprisonment.
Where the offending occurred in circumstances of aggravation being circumstances in which immediately before or at or immediately after the commission of the offence:
Conditional suspended imprisonment
You may be handed a conditional suspended imprisonment order if found guilty of robbery.
A suspended sentence is a prison sentence that is not put into immediate effect. This means that if sentenced to a suspended sentence, you are not required to go to prison and you are released to live in the community. If you commit a crime while on a suspended sentence, you will be sent to prison to serve the sentence.
The standard conditions and primary requirements include:
Suspended term of imprisonment
The court may impose a suspended sentence if found guilty of robbery.
A suspended sentence is a prison sentence that is not put into immediate effect. This means that if sentenced to a suspended sentence, you are not required to go to prison and you are released to live in the community. If you commit a crime while on a suspended sentence, you will be sent to prison to serve the sentence.
Intensive supervision order
An Intensive Supervision Order (ISO) is similar to a community based order but is subject to more stringent conditions. A conviction is recorded against each person placed under an ISO.
For each ISO, a supervision condition is mandatory. There are three other primary requirements, which a court may impose in any combination it wishes. They are:
Whenever an ISO is imposed, an offender must report to a community corrections officer within 72 hours of the sentence being handed down; notify any change of address or employment; not leave the State without permission; and comply with all other conditions of the order.
Offenders who fail to abide by the conditions or who commit an offence, will be returned to court to be dealt with. If the order is successfully completed with no breaches, the offender will have a record, but will not have served time in prison.
Community based order
A community-based order gives offenders the opportunity to put a stop to criminal behaviour. It provides the courts with options for managing offenders in the community. Not all offences are so serious that custodial sentences are the best way to protect the community.
Community based orders provides offenders with an opportunity to undergo treatment or take part in educational, vocational or personal development programs.
In some cases, a community-based order may involve a requirement to perform a community service - and that means offenders have the opportunity to help the community as well as helping themselves. Management of the Order is the responsibility of Department staff.
The court also has the power to make a "spent conviction" order in conjunction with the community-based order. This means that once the period of the order is successfully completed, the offender is not required to reveal the details of the conviction, except in exceptional circumstances.
A community-based order means offenders can stay with their families and friends, continue in their current jobs, or continue to look for work. It means that their lives can continue as normally as possible, while meeting the terms of the order.
There are three basic requirements of a community-based order, and the court will include at least one of them. However, the court also has the power to impose two or even three of the requirements where the judge or magistrate sees fit.
If a community-based order is breached or another offence is committed during the term of the order, the community corrections officer will prepare a "breach report" and the case will come before the court again. Offenders may be re-sentenced on the original offences and may not receive the benefit of a community based option again. Any other offences will also be dealt with and may attract an additional sentence.
When the term of the order has finished with no breaches, the sentence is complete. If the court has determined that a "spent conviction" order is appropriate, no conviction will be recorded against the offender's name when the sentence is successfully completed. Otherwise, the offender will have a criminal record.
Conditional release order
You may be sentenced to a conditional release order if found guilty of a robbery
A conditional release order allows an offender to go about their daily lives under certain conditions.
Offenders can be released with or without a surety, on conditions the court decides are needed to ensure the good behaviour of the offender. A surety is someone who pledges or deposits money with the court as a sort of guarantee that the offender will not reoffend.
If the offender does end up back before the court, the money is not returned, but forfeited to the court.
When making a conditional release order, the court may also issue a spent conviction order. If an offender does not reoffend under a conditional release order, their spent conviction order allows them to no have to disclose the conviction (except in special circumstances).
A conditional release order may include any condition or demand considered necessary to secure the good behaviour of the offender — other than supervision by a Community Corrections Officer.
An offender might be asked to return to court at any time during a conditional release order, to confirm they are meeting the conditions of the order.
If an offender does breach the order by not abiding by the conditions or by reoffending, they can be fined or dealt with again. If they are dealt with again, the court will consider the degree to which they have complied with the order. An offender who has breached a conditional release order may also lose the opportunity of a spent conviction order.
Fine
A fine is an amount of money that a judge, magistrate or justice of the peace in court may order you to pay as a penalty for committing an offence. A fine may be the whole sentence (penalty) or just part of the sentence you receive for the offence. You may be handed a fine by a magistrate when found guilty of robbery.
Your solicitor can assist you in terms of ensuring you recieve the lowest fine possible through a process of mitigation.
If a court imposes a fine on you, you have 28 days to pay that fine and any court costs that were also ordered to be paid. The total amount of fine and costs is referred to as your “fine” when it comes to payment and enforcement of payment.
Not guilty
If you are found not guilty, the charge will be dismissed, there will be no penalties and you are free to go.
If you have incurred any specific costs associated with your trial, including your legal fees, your legal team can ask the court to consider them. The court may order that you be reimbursed.
Being found not guilty means that no conviction will be recorded on your criminal record.
Charges dropped
Our lawyers will relentlessly fight to have your charges dropped if it is clear that there is a suitable legal route to do so. For clients this is the best possible outcome.
Only the prosecution can drop charges, against popular belief that it is possible for the victim to do so.
For this to occur, it's vital you seek legal advice urgently to allow your lawyer enough time to take steps to have charges dropped.
The sooner you act the better.
Leaving things to the last minute makes it more difficult for your legal team to obtain the best possible result.
Lawyers with robbery experience
Meet with lawyers who have successfully represented clients charged with robbery.
Our Process
FreePhone case assessment
Lets talk about your situation confidentially. We will discuss the alleged robbery in detail to understand what happened and be able to tell you if we can help or not. Get the process started now, by requesting a free call back.
Book appointment with our robbery lawyers
If it's clear consulting a solicitor you will help your situation, we can identify the right one for your case and arrange a convenient appointment for you. We will review any documents you send us, and brief the solicitor before you arrive to maximise your time with them.
In depth consultation
At your meeting the solicitor will be able to indicate the outcome they expect to achieve and the legal pathway they would take with you to ensure the best possible result based off past cases and experience. Possible defences will be explored and all of your questions answered.
Sound legal advice & pathway forward
Armed with sound legal advice and a fixed fee quote for respresentation throughout the process you can then decide if you would like them to act on your behalf to drop charges or represent you in court.
The sooner you act the better.
Leaving things to the last minute makes it more difficult for your legal team to obtain the best possible result.
Lawyers with robbery experience
Meet with lawyers who have successfully represented clients charged with robbery.
The Law
Robbery
Criminal code offence
Section 392
“A person who steals a thing and, immediately before, after or at the time of doing so, uses or threatens to use violence to any person or property in order to obtain the thing stolen, or to prevent or overcome resistance to its being stolen is guilty of a crime.”
Elements of the offence
What the Police & Prosecution must prove in court to secure a robbery criminal conviction
How they might prove this
The sooner you act the better.
Leaving things to the last minute makes it more difficult for your legal team to obtain the best possible result.
Lawyers with robbery experience
Meet with lawyers who have successfully represented clients charged with robbery.
Possible Defences
If we can prove one of these defences together
Consent
It may be argued that the person who owns the property you are alleged to have stolen actually consented to you taking the property. If this can be shown, it cannot be said that you took the property fraudulently.
Accident
A person is not criminally responsible for an event which occurs by accident. If it can be shown that the taking of the property was done by mistake, for example you didn’t know you had picked up someone’s property as well as your own, then you have not committed the crime of stealing. But, you may be subject to another offence related to the violence act or threat of violence. This is a difficult defence given that the onus is on the Prosecution to prove that you stole something and acted violently in order to do so. It is unlikely that there would be circumstances where someone would act violently to obtain something that was taken by mistake.
Insanity
Is a defence only in very rare circumstances. The usual process when a person indicates a defence of insanity is an assessment of their mental state and admission into psychiatric/mental health facilities for an indeterminable amount of time.
The sooner you act the better.
Leaving things to the last minute makes it more difficult for your legal team to obtain the best possible result.
Lawyers with robbery experience
Meet with lawyers who have successfully represented clients charged with robbery.
Possible Outcomes
What’s taken into account if you’re found guilty
Prison sentence
Ordinarily the maximum penalty that can be imposed by the Court is a term of imprisonment for up to 14 years.
If before or after the offence, the offender pretends to be or is armed with a dangerous weapon, and the offence is said to have occurred in circumstances of aggravation. The penalty in this regard can be up to life imprisonment.
Where the offending occurred in circumstances of aggravation being circumstances in which immediately before or at or immediately after the commission of the offence:
Conditional suspended imprisonment
You may be handed a conditional suspended imprisonment order if found guilty of robbery.
A suspended sentence is a prison sentence that is not put into immediate effect. This means that if sentenced to a suspended sentence, you are not required to go to prison and you are released to live in the community. If you commit a crime while on a suspended sentence, you will be sent to prison to serve the sentence.
The standard conditions and primary requirements include:
Suspended term of imprisonment
The court may impose a suspended sentence if found guilty of robbery.
A suspended sentence is a prison sentence that is not put into immediate effect. This means that if sentenced to a suspended sentence, you are not required to go to prison and you are released to live in the community. If you commit a crime while on a suspended sentence, you will be sent to prison to serve the sentence.
Intensive supervision order
An Intensive Supervision Order (ISO) is similar to a community based order but is subject to more stringent conditions. A conviction is recorded against each person placed under an ISO.
For each ISO, a supervision condition is mandatory. There are three other primary requirements, which a court may impose in any combination it wishes. They are:
Whenever an ISO is imposed, an offender must report to a community corrections officer within 72 hours of the sentence being handed down; notify any change of address or employment; not leave the State without permission; and comply with all other conditions of the order.
Offenders who fail to abide by the conditions or who commit an offence, will be returned to court to be dealt with. If the order is successfully completed with no breaches, the offender will have a record, but will not have served time in prison.
Community based order
A community-based order gives offenders the opportunity to put a stop to criminal behaviour. It provides the courts with options for managing offenders in the community. Not all offences are so serious that custodial sentences are the best way to protect the community.
Community based orders provides offenders with an opportunity to undergo treatment or take part in educational, vocational or personal development programs.
In some cases, a community-based order may involve a requirement to perform a community service - and that means offenders have the opportunity to help the community as well as helping themselves. Management of the Order is the responsibility of Department staff.
The court also has the power to make a "spent conviction" order in conjunction with the community-based order. This means that once the period of the order is successfully completed, the offender is not required to reveal the details of the conviction, except in exceptional circumstances.
A community-based order means offenders can stay with their families and friends, continue in their current jobs, or continue to look for work. It means that their lives can continue as normally as possible, while meeting the terms of the order.
There are three basic requirements of a community-based order, and the court will include at least one of them. However, the court also has the power to impose two or even three of the requirements where the judge or magistrate sees fit.
If a community-based order is breached or another offence is committed during the term of the order, the community corrections officer will prepare a "breach report" and the case will come before the court again. Offenders may be re-sentenced on the original offences and may not receive the benefit of a community based option again. Any other offences will also be dealt with and may attract an additional sentence.
When the term of the order has finished with no breaches, the sentence is complete. If the court has determined that a "spent conviction" order is appropriate, no conviction will be recorded against the offender's name when the sentence is successfully completed. Otherwise, the offender will have a criminal record.
Conditional release order
You may be sentenced to a conditional release order if found guilty of a robbery
A conditional release order allows an offender to go about their daily lives under certain conditions.
Offenders can be released with or without a surety, on conditions the court decides are needed to ensure the good behaviour of the offender. A surety is someone who pledges or deposits money with the court as a sort of guarantee that the offender will not reoffend.
If the offender does end up back before the court, the money is not returned, but forfeited to the court.
When making a conditional release order, the court may also issue a spent conviction order. If an offender does not reoffend under a conditional release order, their spent conviction order allows them to no have to disclose the conviction (except in special circumstances).
A conditional release order may include any condition or demand considered necessary to secure the good behaviour of the offender — other than supervision by a Community Corrections Officer.
An offender might be asked to return to court at any time during a conditional release order, to confirm they are meeting the conditions of the order.
If an offender does breach the order by not abiding by the conditions or by reoffending, they can be fined or dealt with again. If they are dealt with again, the court will consider the degree to which they have complied with the order. An offender who has breached a conditional release order may also lose the opportunity of a spent conviction order.
Fine
A fine is an amount of money that a judge, magistrate or justice of the peace in court may order you to pay as a penalty for committing an offence. A fine may be the whole sentence (penalty) or just part of the sentence you receive for the offence. You may be handed a fine by a magistrate when found guilty of robbery.
The maximum fine for a robbery is: $18,000.00
Where there are circumstances of aggravation the maximum fine is $36,000.00.
Your solicitor can assist you in terms of ensuring you recieve the lowest fine possible through a process of mitigation.
If a court imposes a fine on you, you have 28 days to pay that fine and any court costs that were also ordered to be paid. The total amount of fine and costs is referred to as your “fine” when it comes to payment and enforcement of payment.
Not Guilty
If you are found not guilty, the charge will be dismissed, there will be no penalties and you are free to go.
If you have incurred any specific costs associated with your trial, including your legal fees, your legal team can ask the court to consider them. The court may order that you be reimbursed.
Being found not guilty means that no conviction will be recorded on your criminal record.
Charges Dropped
Our lawyers will relentlessly fight to have your charges dropped if it is clear that there is a suitable legal route to do so. For clients this is the best possible outcome.
Only the prosecution can drop charges, against popular belief that it is possible for the victim to do so.
For this to occur, it's vital you seek legal advice urgently to allow your lawyer enough time to take steps to have charges dropped.
The sooner you act the better.
Leaving things to the last minute makes it more difficult for your legal team to obtain the best possible result.
Lawyers with robbery experience
Meet with lawyers who have successfully represented clients charged with robbery.
If you have been charged we are sure you will have lots of questions.
Some of the most popular ones past clients ask are listed below.
What do i tell the Police if they come asking questions?
If you are being interviewed regarding a robbery offence, even if it is an informal chat it is important you obtain legal advice BEFORE speaking the Police. Often the Police will tell you it's just 'routine' or just a 'quick chat'. Whatever they say, they are gathering evidence and they are not your friend.
You are legally obliged to give them your name, address and date of birth HOWEVER you do not have to answer any questions and you can respond with “No comment” to all questions, anything you say may be used against you in the future however responding with “No comment” will not harm your defence.
Often people find it hard to respond with “No comment” when asked a direct question, however after a few attempts the Police will understand and the questioning process will usually end.
Do i really need a robbery solicitor?
If you have been charged with robbery, you should seek professional legal advice.
You should consider the effect of a conviction on your record should you be found guilty after not being represented properly, or making a guilty plea when you had other legal options available but unknown to you.
You may find it much more difficult to find employment when your employer requests a criminal record check. In certain industries it can completely rule you out as an employee. It can also have an impact on visas and international travel.
Think things through carefully before making a decision about not seeking robbery legal advice, we’re low cost and it could cost you a lot more in the long run if you don't gain the best possible result.
Will i go to prison?
This depends on the circumstances of the offence your history and other factors. Each and every robbery charge we deal with is different.
If you are concerned about the impact being found guilty might have on your life, it would be an intelligent idea to seek professional legal advice as soon as possible.
Your lawyer will be able to answer this question once you have had an appointment with them and they have had the opportunity to discuss the facts of your case, any criminal history you may have, your circumstances and taken your further instructions.
Get the best possible outcome with our team.
Some recent outcomes are below.
Perth Man Acquitted - District Court of WA.
A Perth Man was found Not Guilty by jury of 12 after a 5 day Jury Trial in the District Court of WA. The jury were not satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the act was not an accident or an act in self-defence.
Charges Dropped - Armadale Man
An Armadale Man walks away from charges of Aggravated Assault Occasioning Bodily Harm after the complainant confirms with Police that acts were in self-defence.
Perth Man Walks Away - Suspended Sentence
After a fast-track plea of guilty, a Perth Man walked away from the District Court of WA with a suspended sentence for offences of Possession of Child Exploitation Material. Ordinarily, sentences of immediate imprisonment are imposed.
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