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Tampa Criminal Defense Attorney > Lutz Shoplifting & Retail Theft Attorney

Lutz Shoplifting & Retail Theft Attorney

A retail theft charge can follow someone for years in ways they never anticipated. Lost job opportunities, professional license complications, immigration consequences, and a permanent mark on a background check are all real outcomes tied to what many people dismiss as a minor offense. If you have been charged with shoplifting or retail theft in Lutz or the surrounding Hillsborough and Pasco County areas, Lutz shoplifting & retail theft attorney Omar Abdelghany of OA Law Firm handles these cases directly, without passing clients off to an associate or junior staff member.

How Florida Charges Retail Theft, and Why the Level Matters

Florida Statute 812.015 defines retail theft as taking merchandise, property, money, or negotiable documents from a merchant with the intent to deprive that merchant of its value. That definition is broader than most people realize. It covers not just walking out of a store with unpaid merchandise, but also altering price tags, swapping containers to pay less, or using an emergency exit to remove goods.

The charge level depends almost entirely on the value of the merchandise involved. Under $100 is typically a second-degree misdemeanor, carrying up to 60 days in jail and a $500 fine. Between $100 and $750 moves into first-degree misdemeanor territory, with up to a year in county jail. Once the alleged theft value crosses $750, the charge becomes grand theft, a third-degree felony, carrying up to five years in prison. A second retail theft conviction, regardless of value, can also be bumped up a charge level under Florida law, which is a detail that catches many people off guard.

Florida also has specific provisions for organized retail crime, which involves coordinated efforts to steal for resale. These carry significantly elevated felony classifications and are prosecuted more aggressively than individual incidents.

What the State Actually Has to Prove, and Where That Evidence Sometimes Falls Apart

Retail theft prosecutions often feel straightforward to prosecutors because they typically come with surveillance footage and loss prevention officer testimony. But that evidence is not always as airtight as it appears at first review.

Surveillance angles matter. A camera positioned overhead in a large store may capture someone placing an item in a bag, but not clearly enough to establish intent or to confirm that the item was not already in the bag when the person entered. Gaps in footage, poor image resolution, and camera placement near obstructions are all worth examining carefully.

Loss prevention officers are not law enforcement. Their training varies considerably, and the circumstances of a detention, any statements taken, and the method used to identify the suspect are all subject to scrutiny. If a person was detained in a manner that violated their rights, or if statements were taken without proper advisement, that can affect what the prosecution is permitted to use.

Intent is also a genuine element here. The State must show that a person intended to deprive the merchant of the property. Honest mistakes, misunderstandings about self-checkout procedures, and similar situations do happen, and they can be presented to counter the State’s case. Omar investigates the full set of facts surrounding each charge before advising a client on how to respond.

The Collateral Damage That Does Not Show Up in the Statute

The statutory penalties tell only part of the story. Florida retailers are permitted under civil recovery laws to pursue demand letters for monetary damages separate from the criminal proceeding, and many do so routinely. Receiving one of those letters while also navigating a criminal charge creates a stressful double pressure that clients sometimes do not know how to handle. Responding incorrectly to a civil demand letter can create problems in the related criminal case.

For non-citizens, even a misdemeanor theft conviction can carry immigration consequences disproportionate to the criminal penalty itself. Theft offenses can be treated as crimes involving moral turpitude under federal immigration law, potentially affecting visa status, adjustment of status applications, or naturalization eligibility. These are conversations that need to happen before a plea is entered, not after.

Professional license holders, including nurses, real estate agents, contractors, and others regulated by Florida boards, face a separate layer of exposure. Many licensing boards require disclosure of criminal convictions and have independent authority to discipline, suspend, or revoke licensure. The criminal outcome and the licensing consequence do not move on the same timeline.

Serving Clients in Lutz and the Surrounding Area

Lutz sits at the intersection of Hillsborough and Pasco Counties, and retail theft cases originating in the area can be filed in either county depending on exactly where the alleged offense occurred. That distinction matters because the two counties have different prosecutors’ offices, different court procedures, and sometimes different tendencies in how these cases are handled at the plea negotiation stage. OA Law Firm serves clients throughout the broader Tampa Bay area, including Lutz, Land O’ Lakes, Wesley Chapel, New Tampa, and Carrollwood, and Omar practices in all Florida state courts as well as in the U.S. District Courts for the Middle and Northern Districts of Florida.

Questions People Actually Ask About Retail Theft Charges in Florida

Can a shoplifting charge be expunged from a Florida record?

Potentially, yes, depending on the outcome. Florida allows sealing or expungement of certain records under specific eligibility criteria. A withhold of adjudication, for example, can preserve eligibility for expungement in a way that a conviction does not. This is one reason why the resolution of the case, not just the charge itself, has long-term significance.

What happens if this is a first offense?

First-time offenders in Hillsborough and Pasco counties may have access to pretrial diversion programs or deferred prosecution agreements for lower-level retail theft charges. Completing a diversion program can result in the charge being dropped entirely. Not every defendant qualifies, and the terms vary, but it is worth exploring with an attorney before accepting any plea.

Does it matter if the item was returned to the store?

Returning the merchandise does not eliminate the charge, but it can be relevant to plea negotiations and to demonstrating the absence of a profit motive. Prosecutors consider the totality of circumstances, and a client who returned goods and had no prior record is in a different posture than one who did not.

Can I be charged even if I paid for some of the items?

Yes. Partial payment does not negate a retail theft charge for the unpaid portion. Self-checkout disputes are a growing source of these charges, and the question of whether a failure to scan was intentional or accidental often becomes the central dispute in the case.

Will this affect a pending background check for employment?

A pending charge, even without a conviction, may appear on certain background checks depending on how the employer screens. Resolving the charge quickly and favorably is important not just for the criminal record but also for these practical employment considerations.

What if a store’s loss prevention officer made a mistake in identifying me?

Misidentification is a legitimate defense. If the evidence connecting you to the alleged theft is weak or relied on an inaccurate account, that is exactly the type of factual dispute an attorney should be raising at the earliest stage of the case.

Should I accept the store’s offer to pay a fine and avoid charges?

Civil demand letters from retailers are separate from the criminal process. Paying a civil demand does not stop a prosecutor from proceeding with criminal charges. Before signing anything or making any payment in response to a retail demand letter, speak with an attorney who can explain how the two processes interact.

Speak With a Lutz Retail Theft Defense Lawyer Directly

At OA Law Firm, Omar Abdelghany personally handles every matter from intake through resolution. Clients deal with their attorney, not a rotating cast of staff. He returns calls and emails promptly, provides his cell number to clients, and makes sure each person fully understands the charges against them and the strategy being used in their defense. If you need a Lutz retail theft defense lawyer, contact OA Law Firm to schedule an initial consultation and discuss where your case stands.

Client Reviews
Stars

"I was in the unfortunate situation of having to hire a lawyer for my grandson and since I did not know of anyone that could refer me, I had to rely on my judgement of character and when I sat down in front of Omar, I knew that I had made the right decision. He is a very professional, well versed in the law, knowledgeable young man that takes the time to explain every aspect of your case to you. He returns calls promptly, knows your case inside out and is very punctual in meetings and court hearings. I could not have chosen a better, more qualified lawyer to represent my grandson. He comes highly recommended by me and you will not go wrong in obtaining his services."

- Gloria

"It is with pleasure that we wish to recommend Mr. Omar Abdelghany in his practice as a Criminal Defense Attorney. He was hired in the defense of our son. The defense included more than one offense, which required legal maneuvering to address the issues. Omar's skills came into play in positioning the case, which resulted in a good outcome given the facts at hand."

- Ted

"Lawyer Abdelghany, has been a tremendous blessing and stress reliever, not only to me but also to my family members in need of professional help. He was understanding of my situation and worked with me financially. I am overall grateful for him and would refer all my family and friends to hire him."

- Khalil G.
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