If you’re convicted of burglary in Colorado, you face years in prison and exorbitant fines. Don’t take the risk of representing yourself. Read this article to learn more about fighting burglary charges in Colorado.
You improve your chances of defeating burglary charges when you have an experienced criminal defense attorney.
Colorado law defines burglary as when someone “knowingly breaks an entrance into, or enters, or remains unlawfully in any of the following:
with intent to commit therein a crime against a person or property. Colo. Revised Statutes §§ 18-4-202, 18-4-203, 18-4-204
You are guilty of burglary the minute you knowingly and illegally enter an occupied structure — or illegally remain there after a lawful or unlawful entry — with the intent to commit a crime against a person or property.
Whether you actually commit the intended crime is irrelevant. For example, you can still face burglary charges if you break into a home to steal money from a safe but never open the safe.
If you were lawfully on or in the building or structure, you are not guilty of burglary — even if you came onto the property intending to commit a crime. Let’s say you’re a plumber who’s hired to fix someone’s toilet. While you’re at the home, you steal some jewelry. Because you were legally in the home, you committed theft, not burglary.
Burglary charges depend on the severity of the crime. Let’s look at how Colorado law breaks down burglary charges.
You could face first-degree burglary charges if, in the course of burglarizing an occupied building:
First-degree burglary is a class 3 felony. A conviction could mean four to 12 years in prison and a maximum $750,000 fine. There is an exception if the property involved is a controlled substance, which we’ll discuss later in the article.
Second-degree burglary is a class 4 felony in most cases. However, it is a class 3 felony under the following circumstances:
Not all second-degree burglary charges may be felonies, however. Second-degree burglary can also be charged as a class 2 misdemeanor if you knowingly violated a written notice by a retailer or an order by a court of lawful jurisdiction specifically restraining a person from entering a particular retail location during hours when the retail store is open to the public. C.R.S. § 18-4-203
You can be charged with third-degree burglary if you enter or break into any vault, safe, cash register, coin vending machine, product dispenser, money depository, safety deposit box, coin telephone, coin box, or other apparatus or equipment with the intent to commit a crime. C.R.S. § 18-4-204
Generally, third-degree burglary is a Class 2 misdemeanor, meaning that if you are convicted, you may face up to 120 days in jail and/or up to a $750 fine. However, third-degree burglary is a Class 1 misdemeanor if the objective of the burglary is the theft of a controlled substance or substances. If convicted of a Class 1 misdemeanor, you may face up to 364 days in jail and/or a $1,000 fine.
The severity of your burglary charges increases if your objective is to steal a controlled substance. For example, the involvement of controlled substances from a pharmacy —or any other place with lawful possession—makes first-degree burglary a class 2 felony. This means you face up to a 24-year state prison sentence and a maximum $1 million fine if you’re convicted.
Burglary is a felony or misdemeanor in Colorado. Penalties range from just fines to 24 years in prison depending on:
Prosecutors do not necessarily need direct evidence of your crime to support a burglary conviction. Colorado criminal courts accept circumstantial evidence alone if the prosecution demonstrates that:
In the above-cited case, a Denver man returned from a trip to find that his home had been burglarized. The homeowner called the local police and reported numerous household items missing. Two days later, police officers saw Phillip McClendon and another man carrying various household goods down an alley.
Police arrested McClendon and charged him with second-degree burglary. A Denver jury subsequently convicted him.
McClendon appealed his conviction all the way to the Colorado Supreme Court, but the court found that:
“There is more than a possibility, and, in fact, a high probability, that the defendant, who was in recent possession of property stolen from Daniel’s residence, and who was arrested near the scene of the burglary shortly after the burglary occurred, entered Daniel’s house with the intent to commit a crime.” People v. McClendon, 188 Colo. 140, 143-44, 533 P.2d 923, 925 (1975)
In the early ’70s, a secretary at a Fort Collins law firm briefly left her office and returned to find Edward Hutton standing by her desk. Hutton told the woman that he had been looking for the key to the men’s restroom. After he left, the woman noticed her billfold was missing from her purse.
Police arrested Hutton later that day. He maintained during the trial that he had entered the woman’s office with the intent of finding the men’s restroom key. Stealing her billfold had merely been a crime of opportunity.
Regardless, a Larimer County jury convicted Hutton of second-degree burglary. He appealed, and the case eventually reached the Colorado Supreme Court.
The state’s highest court found that Hutton “could have been telling the truth that he entered the office with the intent to find the key to the men’s room, and concluded to commit the theft after entering the room and seeing the purse.” Hutton v. People, 177 Colo. 448, 450, 494 P.2d 822, 823 (1972)
The court concluded the evidence was sufficient to convict Hutton of theft, but not burglary. Hutton’s sentence was vacated.
Some of the most common defenses to Colorado burglary charges include:
It’s a major mistake not to hire a criminal defense attorney when you face burglary charges. The criminal defense attorneys at Robinson & Henry have an immense amount of experience handling burglary cases and will walk beside you as you navigate the criminal justice system. Call 303-688-0944 today to begin your case assessment.