Lutz Armed Burglary Attorney
Armed burglary is one of the most aggressively prosecuted felony offenses in Florida. Prosecutors treat weapons allegations in burglary cases as an automatic justification to seek maximum sentences, and Hillsborough County courts do not treat these charges lightly. If you or someone close to you has been charged with this offense in Lutz or the surrounding area, a Lutz armed burglary attorney from OA Law Firm is prepared to begin building a defense immediately. Omar Abdelghany handles every case personally, meaning your calls go to your lawyer, not a paralegal, and your case receives direct attorney attention from the first consultation through resolution.
What Florida Law Actually Means by Armed Burglary
Under Florida Statute 810.02, burglary is defined as entering or remaining in a structure, dwelling, or conveyance without authorization while intending to commit a crime inside. The offense escalates significantly when a weapon is involved. If the person allegedly committed the burglary while armed with a dangerous weapon, or if they became armed during the course of the offense, the charge upgrades to a first-degree felony punishable by up to life in prison. That “punishable by life” classification is not an exaggeration and not a worst-case-scenario number pulled from a statute no one enforces. Florida judges and prosecutors treat it as a ceiling they can reach for in serious cases.
The weapon does not need to be a firearm. A knife, a bat, a wrench, or any object that could cause great bodily harm qualifies. And critically, Florida’s 10-20-Life law means that if a firearm was actually used or discharged during the offense, mandatory minimum sentences apply regardless of how otherwise clean a defendant’s record may be. These are mandatory floors the judge cannot go below. The prosecution will use that reality as leverage throughout the case, which is exactly why the defense strategy matters so much from the earliest stages.
How These Charges Get Built and Where They Break Down
Armed burglary cases in Hillsborough County are typically built from a combination of physical evidence, witness statements, surveillance footage, and law enforcement reports. The question of whether a defendant was authorized to be on the property is often more contested than prosecutors let on. Landlord-tenant relationships, domestic situations, shared living arrangements, and prior invitations to enter can all complicate the State’s ability to prove lack of authorization. Prosecutors tend to frame facts in the light most favorable to conviction, and without a defense attorney reviewing the same records, that framing goes unchallenged.
Surveillance footage is increasingly central to these prosecutions, and it cuts both ways. Video that law enforcement believes shows a defendant entering a structure may show nothing of the kind under scrutiny. Chain of custody for physical evidence, the circumstances under which a search warrant was obtained or executed, and whether eyewitness identifications followed proper procedure are all areas where constitutional challenges can result in suppression of evidence. A suppressed weapon or excluded identification can fundamentally change what the State is actually capable of proving at trial.
Omar carefully reviews police reports, warrant applications, property ownership and access records, and any statements made by the defendant to determine what the State actually has versus what it claims to have. That distinction is not always obvious at the outset, and it often determines whether a case resolves through dismissal, negotiated reduction, or contested trial.
The “Intent to Commit a Crime” Element and Why It Matters in Lutz Cases
Burglary, including the armed version, is what Florida law calls a specific intent crime. The State must prove not just that the defendant entered a structure without authorization, but that they did so with the specific intent to commit a crime inside. That intent element is often where defense attorneys find room to work.
Proving intent requires the State to rely heavily on circumstantial evidence: what was found in the defendant’s possession, what time of day the entry occurred, whether the location suggested a planned approach, and what witnesses observed. Each of those inferences can be challenged. Circumstantial cases sometimes look airtight on paper but fall apart when the underlying assumptions are questioned through cross-examination and competing evidence.
In the Lutz area, where residential neighborhoods, commercial corridors along U.S. 41, and properties near the Suncoast Parkway bring different patterns of alleged criminal activity, the context of each case varies in ways that matter legally. An entry into a commercial property at night looks different in court than entry into a private residence, and the evidence the State can typically gather differs accordingly. Understanding those distinctions requires familiarity with how these cases actually proceed in Hillsborough County courtrooms.
Answers to Questions Clients Ask About These Charges
Can armed burglary charges be reduced to a lesser offense?
Yes, in certain circumstances. A reduction depends on the strength of the evidence, the specific facts of the alleged offense, the defendant’s criminal history, and the quality of the defense work done before and during negotiations. Reductions to simple burglary, attempted burglary, or trespass are possible but not guaranteed. They are the result of strategic legal work, not automatic concessions from prosecutors.
Does the weapon have to be fired for mandatory minimums to apply?
No. Simply possessing a firearm during the commission of a burglary triggers a mandatory minimum under Florida’s 10-20-Life statute. Discharge of the firearm triggers a higher mandatory minimum, and if someone is shot, the mandatory minimum increases further. These are not discretionary sentencing enhancements. They are floors that bind the judge.
What if I had permission to be on the property?
Authorization to enter is a complete defense to burglary. If you had express or implied permission to be on the property, the unlawful entry element cannot be proven. The challenge is presenting that defense effectively with supporting evidence, which is why the investigation your attorney conducts is important from the start.
What happens if the weapon found is disputed or not mine?
Ownership of the weapon is not required for the armed burglary charge to apply. Constructive possession, meaning the State argues you had access to and control over the weapon even if it was not on your person, is enough under Florida law. Challenging whether constructive possession was actually established is a legitimate defense avenue that depends on the specific facts.
Will this charge appear on a background check permanently?
A felony conviction for armed burglary will appear on background checks and results in the loss of civil rights including the right to possess firearms. Florida’s record sealing and expungement laws generally do not apply to convictions, so avoiding conviction through dismissal, acquittal, or a reduction to an eligible offense is the only way to protect your record going forward.
How quickly does the defense need to start working?
Early intervention matters. Evidence that exists now, including surveillance footage from private systems, witness availability, and the opportunity to identify problems in the warrant or arrest process, can disappear or become harder to access with time. The earlier a defense attorney gets involved, the more options remain available.
Does OA Law Firm handle cases in both state and federal court?
Yes. Omar Abdelghany is licensed in all Florida state courts as well as the U.S. District Courts for the Middle and Northern Districts of Florida. While armed burglary is typically a state charge, cases that involve federal property or cross certain legal thresholds may be brought in federal court, and OA Law Firm is equipped to handle either forum.
Defending Clients Across the Lutz Area and Hillsborough County
OA Law Firm represents clients throughout the greater Tampa Bay area, including Lutz and the unincorporated communities of northern Hillsborough County. The firm also serves clients from Land O’Lakes, Wesley Chapel, Odessa, and surrounding areas where charges frequently route through Hillsborough County courts. Omar’s practice is built on direct attorney access, which matters particularly in serious felony cases where strategy can shift and clients need to speak with their lawyer, not a case manager.
Talk to an Armed Burglary Defense Lawyer in Lutz
A first-degree felony carrying the potential for a life sentence is not a charge to address without counsel who understands exactly what the State must prove and where the weaknesses in their case may lie. OA Law Firm exists to give defendants in the Tampa Bay area that level of direct, focused representation. Omar Abdelghany founded this firm on the principle that the quality of legal defense should not depend on the severity of the accusations. If you are facing armed burglary charges in the Lutz area, contact OA Law Firm to schedule a consultation with a Lutz armed burglary defense attorney who will personally review your case and tell you plainly what your options are.
