Burglary Defense Attorney
Burglary is a felony in Missouri — even if nothing was taken and no one was harmed. First-degree burglary carries 5 to 15 years in prison. These cases often hinge on the question of intent, and that's where a strong defense makes the difference.
Book a Free Consultation Or call now — 816-451-0909What Is Burglary in Missouri?
Burglary in Missouri is defined as knowingly entering or remaining unlawfully in a building or inhabitable structure with the intent to commit a crime inside. This is a critical distinction from theft — burglary doesn't require that anything was actually stolen. The crime is complete the moment you enter (or remain) with criminal intent, regardless of whether any other offense is carried out.
This means you can be convicted of burglary even if you didn't take anything, didn't damage anything, and didn't harm anyone. The entire case turns on what prosecutors believe your intent was at the time you entered the structure.
What Must the Prosecutor Prove?
To convict on a burglary charge, the State must prove each of these elements beyond a reasonable doubt:
Elements of Burglary
- Unlawful entry or remaining — You entered or stayed in a building or inhabitable structure without the owner's consent or legal authority to be there.
- Knowingly — You were aware that your entry or presence was unauthorized.
- Intent to commit a crime — At the time you entered or remained, you intended to commit a criminal offense inside — typically theft, but it can be any crime.
The word "intent" does the heavy lifting. Prosecutors must prove what was in your mind at the time you entered the building. Because intent is invisible, the State typically relies on circumstantial evidence — what time you entered, whether you had tools, what you did once inside, and whether you had a plausible reason to be there. Every one of those inferences can be challenged.
Degrees and Penalties
First-Degree Burglary — RSMo §569.160 (Class B Felony)
- What elevates to first degree: The defendant was armed with a deadly weapon, threatened or caused harm to someone inside, or another person (who was not a participant in the crime) was present in the building.
- Penalty: 5 to 15 years in the Missouri Department of Corrections.
Second-Degree Burglary — RSMo §569.170 (Class D Felony)
- What it covers: Knowingly entering unlawfully or remaining in a building with intent to commit a crime — without the aggravating factors that trigger first degree.
- Penalty: 1 to 7 years in prison.
Possession of Burglary Tools — RSMo §569.180 (Class E Felony)
- What it covers: Possessing tools — crowbars, lock picks, bolt cutters, slim jims — with the intent to use them for burglary.
- Penalty: Up to 4 years in prison.
- Key point: The State must prove intent to use the tools for burglary. Simply possessing common tools is not a crime — the context and circumstances matter.
The distinction between first and second degree is the difference between a Class B felony (5–15 years) and a Class D felony (1–7 years). Whether the building was occupied, whether a weapon was present, and whether anyone was threatened are the facts that determine which degree applies. Challenging the State's evidence on these aggravating factors is a core part of our defense strategy.
Burglary vs. Theft vs. Robbery
People frequently confuse these three offenses, but Missouri law treats them very differently:
Key Distinctions
- Burglary: Unlawful entry with intent to commit a crime inside. No taking of property is required. No force against a person is required.
- Theft (Stealing): Taking property without consent and with the intent to permanently deprive the owner. No unlawful entry is required.
- Robbery: Taking property from a person by force or threat of force. This is a violent crime with significantly harsher penalties.
A single incident can result in charges for all three — burglary for entering, theft for taking property, and robbery if force was used against a person inside. Each charge carries its own penalties and must be defended separately.
Common Scenarios That Lead to Burglary Charges
How Burglary Cases Typically Start
- Entering a property without clear permission: Going into a home, garage, or business thinking you had permission — then being accused of unauthorized entry. Common between ex-partners, former roommates, and estranged family members.
- Domestic disputes: Entering a residence you used to share — or believe you still have a right to access — during a breakup or family conflict.
- Being found on property after hours: Being inside a school, retail store, construction site, or abandoned building after hours. Even without stealing anything, prosecutors may charge burglary based on alleged intent.
- Mistaken identity: Being wrongly identified through faulty surveillance footage, unreliable witness statements, or proximity to the scene.
- Possession of tools: Being stopped while carrying common tools (crowbar, screwdriver) and having officers assume criminal intent.
Common Defense Strategies for Burglary
Burglary cases depend almost entirely on circumstantial evidence about what you intended when you entered a building. That makes these cases more defensible than most people realize:
You Had Consent to Enter
Burglary requires unlawful entry. If you had permission to be in the building — or reasonably believed you did — the charge may fail. This defense arises frequently in cases involving ex-partners, former roommates, employees, and family members where access was previously granted.
No Intent to Commit a Crime Inside
The State must prove that at the moment you entered the building, you intended to commit a crime inside. Simply being present is not enough. If you entered to retrieve your own belongings, to sleep, to use a restroom, or for any non-criminal purpose, the intent element is not met.
Challenging the Aggravating Factors
The difference between first-degree and second-degree burglary is enormous — 5–15 years vs. 1–7 years. We challenge whether the building was truly occupied, whether a weapon was actually present, and whether anyone was genuinely threatened. Reducing the degree of the charge can cut the potential sentence in half.
Mistaken Identity
Burglaries often occur at night, in low-light conditions, with limited or poor-quality surveillance footage. Eyewitness identifications in these circumstances are notoriously unreliable. We challenge the State's identification evidence and expose weaknesses in their theory about who was actually present.
Suppression of Evidence
If law enforcement searched your home, vehicle, or person without a warrant or without probable cause, the evidence obtained — including tools, stolen property, or statements — may be suppressible under the Fourth Amendment. A successful suppression motion can gut the prosecution's case.
Challenging "Burglary Tools" Charges
Possession of burglary tools (RSMo §569.180) requires proof that you intended to use the tools for burglary. A crowbar in your truck, a screwdriver in your pocket, or bolt cutters in your toolbox are not inherently criminal. The State must prove intent — and context matters enormously.
How Burglary Cases Are Handled in Kansas City
Burglary is one of the more aggressively prosecuted property crimes in the Kansas City metro. In Jackson County, first-degree burglary cases — particularly those involving occupied dwellings — are treated with the same seriousness as many violent crimes. Prosecutors are often reluctant to negotiate these cases down without strong defense pressure.
Second-degree burglary cases offer more room for negotiation, especially for first-time offenders and cases with weak evidence of intent. In some jurisdictions across the metro, favorable outcomes are achievable through plea negotiations that reduce the charge, secure probation instead of prison, or pursue diversion where available.
The Hartley Law Firm handles burglary cases across Jackson, Clay, Platte, and Cass Counties every month. We know how each prosecutor's office approaches these cases, what kinds of plea offers are realistic, and when to push back aggressively versus when to negotiate strategically.
Courts Where We Defend Burglary Cases
The Hartley Law Firm handles burglary cases across the Kansas City metro — on both sides of the state line.
Jackson County
The highest volume of burglary cases in the metro. We defend clients at the downtown Kansas City courthouse and the Eastern Jackson County Courthouse in Independence.
Clay County
Cases heard at the Clay County Courthouse in Liberty. Residential burglary cases from the Northland communities are common in this jurisdiction.
Platte County
Cases handled at the Platte County Courthouse in Platte City. We defend burglary cases from Parkville, Riverside, and throughout the county.
Cass County
Cases heard at the Cass County Courthouse in Harrisonville. Burglary charges from Belton, Raymore, and the southern metro area.
Johnson County, KS
Cases heard at the Johnson County District Court in Olathe. Kansas burglary statutes differ from Missouri's in both structure and penalties.
Wyandotte County, KS
Cases heard at the Wyandotte County District Court in Kansas City, KS. We defend burglary charges throughout the Unified Government jurisdiction.
Frequently Asked Questions About Burglary Charges
Facing Burglary Charges?
Burglary is always a felony in Missouri — but these cases often hinge on intent, and intent can be challenged. Call The Hartley Law Firm today for a free consultation.
Book Your Free Consultation Or call now — 816-451-0909