An offense involving the physical removal of property from a premises, referenced as one of the purposes for which burglary tools may be possessed.
Right Law Group's guide explains: "It is a Class 5 felony and is punishable by up to three years in prison and $100,000 in fines. If the District Attorney cannot prove that a person knowingly possessed the tools with the intent to forcibly enter a dwelling, they can still charge a Class 2 misdemeanor for simply possessing the tools."
Source · Read guide ↗Each answer links directly to the source where a Right Law Group attorney addressed this question.
1 answers grounded in Right Law Group sources
“The service was excellent.”
fought for me at every step