Bail Bonds for Robbery and Armed Robbery Charges
A robbery arrest in Florida is treated more seriously than a theft case because the charge involves force, violence, assault, or putting another person in fear during the taking of property. That distinction matters at first appearance, where the court is evaluating an allegation that property was taken through intimidation or physical force. Under Florida law, robbery is defined in section812.13, and robbery by sudden snatching is addressed separately in section 812.131.
Robbery charges can cover a range of conduct, and the degree of the offense has a direct effect on bail. Standard robbery without a weapon is a second degree felony. However, if the state alleges that the defendant carried a weapon, the charge rises to a first degree felony. If the allegation involves a firearm or other deadly weapon, the case is treated even more aggressively, because the statute authorizes first degree felony treatment punishable up to life. Robbery by sudden snatching is charged differently, and can fall below standard robbery in severity when there is no firearm or deadly weapon.
The defendant can be released once bail is set and a licensed bail agent posts the bond while the case proceeds through the court system.