Driving a vehicle you did not know was stolen should not make you a felon.
Automobile theft is treated as a uniquely destabilizing property crime, warranting distinct statutory carveouts. The unauthorized use of a motor vehicle—often referred to colloquially as joyriding—is classified as a Class C2 felony. This means a first-time offender immediately faces a baseline range of up to seven years in prison alongside a 20% mandatory time-served bracket. If the state determines the defendant specifically intended to permanently deprive the owner of the vehicle or sell it, the charge shifts to the Possession of a Stolen Vehicle or outright Grand Larceny of an Automobile, which retain identical Class C2 felony classifications but often trigger harsher posture from prosecutors during plea negotiations. A second conviction for automobile theft elevates the crime to a Class B4 felony, exposing the repeat offender to ten years in prison with a 50% time-served mandate.
Possession of a Stolen Vehicle is a felony punishable by 3 to 20 years in the Department of Corrections and a fine up to $500,000. It also carries massive mandatory restitution. The penalties are vastly more severe than a standard theft charge, making it critical to aggressively combat the "knowledge" element of the prosecution's case.
We defend stolen vehicle cases by challenging knowledge — proving you had no reason to know the vehicle was stolen. This includes presenting evidence of lawful acquisition (bill of sale, title transfer, loan documentation), challenging the identification of the vehicle, and examining the circumstances of how you came to possess it.
We defend possession of a stolen vehicle cases in courts across northeastern Oklahoma, including state, federal, and tribal jurisdictions.
A shoplifting conviction puts a theft charge on your permanent record.
Even "petit" larceny puts a theft conviction on your permanent record.
The key word is "knowingly." That is where your defense begins.
Unauthorized use is not theft, but it is still a serious criminal charge.
Schedule a free, confidential consultation. A former prosecutor will review your case and outline your best defense options.