Receiving Stolen Property $2500 To $20000
Legal Definition
A person commits receiving stolen property when they buy, receive, or aid in concealing property that they know or have reason to believe has been stolen, with the intent to deprive the owner of the property. The offense is classified by the value of the stolen property received. This charge applies when the value of the property is between $2,500 and $20,000.
Possible Punishment
Basic sentence of 18 months imprisonment and a fine up to $5,000. Upon release, a mandatory parole period of 2 years applies. The sentence may be enhanced if the defendant is a habitual offender or if other aggravating circumstances are present.
Local Context
New Mexico's receiving-stolen-property statute grades the offense by the aggregate value of the property involved. Property valued under $500 is a petty misdemeanor; $500 to $2,500 is a misdemeanor; $2,500 to $20,000 is a fourth degree felony; and over $20,000 is a third degree felony. The prosecution must prove the defendant knew or had reason to believe the property was stolen.
Property-Crime Cases in Doña Ana County
Property charges in New Mexico scale with dollar value and circumstances. The same shoplifting conduct can be a petty misdemeanor or a felony depending on the value of what was taken, and burglary escalates sharply when the structure is a home or someone is inside. That is why our charge database lists several versions of larceny and burglary with different classifications.
Property cases also drive a large share of repeat bookings: failure to appear on an older larceny case frequently brings someone back into the detention center on a bench warrant alongside any new charge.
Related Guides
Misdemeanor vs. Felony in New Mexico: Sentences, Courts, and Consequences
How New Mexico separates petty misdemeanors, misdemeanors, and felony degrees: sentence ranges, jail vs. prison, habitual enhancements, and collateral costs.
Bench Warrants and Failure to Appear in New Mexico: How a Missed Court Date Becomes a Booking
What a bench warrant is, how it differs from an arrest warrant, why FTA bookings fill the Doña Ana County jail log, and how to clear a warrant before arrest.
Recent Arrests for This Charge (2)
Information provided for general reference. Statutory text is summarized and may not reflect the most recent amendments. All persons listed are presumed innocent until proven guilty.

