Providence Motor Vehicle Theft Attorney

Do I need a lawyer for a motor vehicle theft charge in Rhode Island?

By |2026-05-24T00:05:28-04:00May 24, 2026||

Yes. Motor vehicle theft in Rhode Island is typically charged as a felony with up to 10 years prison, lifetime felony record, firearm prohibition, license suspension, severe insurance impact, and significant employment consequences. The most important defense work focuses on reducing felony charges to misdemeanor joyriding, which eliminates the prison Read More

Can motor vehicle theft charges be defended in Rhode Island?

By |2026-05-24T00:05:22-04:00May 24, 2026||

Yes. Rhode Island motor vehicle theft charges can be defended through several angles. The intent element is the most-contested — the prosecution must prove you intended to permanently deprive the owner, not that you borrowed without permission with intent to return. Other defenses include mistaken identity (especially in surveillance-based cases), Read More

Will a motor vehicle theft conviction affect my driver's license in Rhode Island?

By |2026-05-24T00:05:16-04:00May 24, 2026||

Yes. A Rhode Island motor vehicle theft conviction can trigger driver's license suspension on top of the criminal penalties. The DMV reviews motor vehicle-related convictions and can impose administrative suspension separate from any court-ordered suspension. Insurance impact is also severe: most carriers significantly raise premiums or refuse coverage after a Read More

Can a motor vehicle theft charge be reduced in Rhode Island?

By |2026-05-24T00:05:10-04:00May 24, 2026||

Yes. Rhode Island motor vehicle theft charges are reduced regularly when the defense can challenge the intent element. Common reductions include felony motor vehicle theft to misdemeanor joyriding (eliminating prison exposure), felony to lesser property crime like unauthorized use, or felony to diversion program with eventual dismissal. The most valuable Read More

What are the penalties for motor vehicle theft in Rhode Island?

By |2026-05-24T00:05:04-04:00May 24, 2026||

Motor vehicle theft penalties in Rhode Island scale by charge level and circumstances. Felony motor vehicle theft carries up to 10 years in state prison, fines up to $5,000, mandatory restitution to the owner, and a permanent felony record. Joyriding misdemeanor carries up to 1 year jail and lower fines. Read More

What is the difference between motor vehicle theft and joyriding in Rhode Island?

By |2026-05-24T00:04:58-04:00May 24, 2026||

The difference between motor vehicle theft and joyriding in Rhode Island is the intent element. Motor vehicle theft (felony) requires intent to permanently deprive the owner of the vehicle — to keep it, sell it, or strip it. Joyriding (unauthorized use of a motor vehicle, misdemeanor) requires only intent to Read More