Hawaii Revised Statutes
708. Offenses Against Property Rights
708-841 Robbery in the second degree. § §708-840 And 708-841 Commentary:

§708-841 Robbery in the second degree. (1) A person commits the offense of robbery in the second degree if, in the course of committing theft or non-consensual taking of a motor vehicle:
(a) The person uses force against the person of anyone present with the intent to overcome that person's physical resistance or physical power of resistance;
(b) The person threatens the imminent use of force against the person of anyone who is present with intent to compel acquiescence to the taking of or escaping with the property; or
(c) The person recklessly inflicts serious bodily injury upon another.
(2) Robbery in the second degree is a class B felony. [L 1972, c 9, pt of §1; am L 1983, c 68, §2; am L 1986, c 314, §69; gen ch 1993; am L 2006, c 230, §42]
Case Notes
Circuit court's failure to give a specific unanimity instruction that the jury was required to agree unanimously as to the person against whom defendant used force constituted plain error and there was at least a reasonable possibility that the circuit court's error contributed to defendant's conviction; thus, the error was not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. 131 H. 19, 313 P.2d 708 (2013).
Under §701-109(1)(c), petitioner could not be convicted of both robbery in the second degree and assault in the first degree; the jury inconsistently found that petitioner intentionally or knowingly and recklessly inflicted serious bodily injury on complainant. 131 H. 353, 319 P.3d 272 (2013).
Where petitioner, convicted of robbery in the second degree and assault in the first degree ( §707-710), could not be convicted of both offenses, the assault conviction was reversed; among other things, there was sufficient evidence to convict petitioner as to robbery in the second degree and because the penalties for the robbery and assault convictions are the same, it could not be said that petitioner would be prejudiced by dismissal of the assault charge. 131 H. 353, 319 P.3d 272 (2013).
Evidence of threat of force held sufficient. 2 H. App. 259, 630 P.2d 126 (1981).
Where jury convicted defendant of robbery in the first degree under §708-840, error by circuit court when it failed to instruct jury on robbery in the second degree under this section and theft in the fourth degree under §708-833, which were included offenses of robbery in the first degree, was harmless. 123 H. 456 (App.), 235 P.3d 1168 (2010).
COMMENTARY ON § §708-840 AND 708-841
Basically, robbery appears to consist of both theft and threatened or actual assault. It is significant to note, however, that the theft acts as an incentive to the threatened use of force. Thus the combination of these two criminal activities has a multiplicative, rather than a simple additive effect. This increased risk of harm is one reason why robbery is treated as a separate offense and more severely penalized than the sum of its simple components would seem to indicate.[1] Another reason which has been advanced for the separate treatment of robbery is that the average citizen feels a special degree of affront at the prospect of having his possessions taken through the threat or use of force.[2] In a slightly different vein, it has also been suggested that such an offender "exhibits himself as seriously deviated from community norms, requiring more extensive incapacitation and retraining."[3]
When the legislature adopted the Code in 1972, it consolidated the Proposed Draft's three degrees of robbery into two degrees. The simple threat or use of force or the reckless infliction of serious bodily injury in the commission of a theft constitutes robbery in the second degree and carries a class B felony sanction. Where the person committing the above acts is armed with a dangerous instrument, or intentionally inflicts serious bodily harm, or attempts to kill, the offense is increased to the first degree and its sanction to a class A felony.
Previous Hawaii law also recognized two degrees of robbery. Robbery was defined as the "stealing of a thing from the person of another or from his custody or presence, by force or putting him in fear."[4] Robbery in the first degree was robbery by one armed with a dangerous weapon who injured another in committing the robbery or who, if resisted, intended to kill or injure another.[5] All other robbery was second degree robbery.[6] Thus, the Code's definitions of the offenses are substantively similar to those of prior Hawaii law; however, the Code's definitions are more inclusive than prior law and are linguistically correlated with the theft offenses.
SUPPLEMENTAL COMMENTARY ON § §708-840 AND 708-841
Act 68, Session Laws 1983, amended § §708-840 and 708-841 so that a person could be charged with robbery if that person, in committing theft, used force intended to overcome any person's resistance. This amendment was believed necessary because often a property owner is not present when force is used to take that owner's property. In that case, under prior law the person forcibly taking the property could not have been charged with robbery. Senate Standing Committee Report No. 788.
Act 68, Session Laws 1998, amended §708-840 by including in the offense of robbery in the first degree, situations where a person knowingly inflicts or attempts to inflict serious bodily injury on another in the course of committing a theft. The legislature believed that since robbery was essentially an assault committed during the course of a theft, the statutory scheme involving the highest degree of robbery, robbery in the first degree, should be consistent with that of the assault statutes, and thus, robbery in the first degree should include both the intentional and knowing states of mind. Act 68 made the offense of robbery in the first degree consistent with the offense of assault in the first degree. House Standing Committee Report No. 1231-98.
Act 116, Session Laws 2006, amended §708-840, expanding the offense of robbery in the first degree to include using force to commit a theft or threatening imminent use of force against a person during a time of civil defense emergency or during a period of disaster relief. Act 116 penalized the commission of certain crimes during a time of a civil defense emergency proclaimed by the governor or during a period of disaster relief. The legislature found that Hurricanes Katrina and Rita created situations that highlighted the prevalence of opportunistic crimes that can occur during these times. When resources are needed to restore law and order, emergency response aid to victims may be hampered or delayed, leaving victims at an increased risk of bodily injury or death. Stronger measures to control law and order may deter looting and other crimes. Senate Standing Committee Report Nos. 2938 and 3302, Conference Committee Report No. 64-06.
Act 230, Session Laws 2006, amended § §708-840(1) and 708-841(1) by establishing motor vehicle theft as part of the offenses of robbery in the first and second degrees, respectively. House Standing Committee Report No. 665-06.
Act 255, Session Laws 2013, amended §708-840(1) and (2) to include the use of a simulated firearm in the offense of robbery in the first degree. The legislature found that simulated firearms are becoming increasingly difficult to discern from real firearms and as a result, simulated firearms are being used to commit serious criminal offenses. The victims in these crimes believe that the weapons are real and are terrorized when threatened with one. Under existing law, if the weapon is not a real firearm, the suspect cannot be charged with the higher offense of robbery in the first degree and the charge is reduced to a misdemeanor. Senate Standing Committee Report No. 488, House Standing Committee Report No. 1231.
Act 111, Session Laws 2014, which amended §708-840(1), updated and recodified Hawaii's emergency management laws to conform with nationwide emergency management practices by, among other things, establishing a Hawaii emergency management agency in the state department of defense with the functions and authority currently held by the state civil defense agency; establishing the power and authority of the director of Hawaii emergency management, who will be the adjutant general, and providing the director with the functions and authority currently held by the director of civil defense; establishing county emergency management agencies, each to be under the respective county mayor's direction, with the functions and authority currently held by the local organizations for civil defense; and repealing the chapters on disaster relief [chapter 127] and the civil defense [and] emergency act chapter 128, which were determined to be obsolete with the creation of the Hawaii emergency management agency. Conference Committee Report No. 129-14.
__________
§ §708-840 And 708-841 Commentary:
1. See Prop. Mich. Rev. Cr. Code, comments at 256.
2. M.P.C., Tentative Draft No. 11, comments at 69 (1960).
3. Id.
4. H.R.S. §765-1.
5. Id. §765-8.
6. Id.

Structure Hawaii Revised Statutes

Hawaii Revised Statutes

Title 37. Hawaii Penal Code

708. Offenses Against Property Rights

708-800 Definitions of terms in this chapter.

708-801 Valuation of property or services.

708-802 Property recovered in offenses against property rights.

708-803 Habitual property crime.

708-804 Control of albizia trees on private property.

708-810 Burglary in the first degree.

708-811 Burglary in the second degree. § §708-810 And 708-811 Commentary:

708-812 Possession of burglar's tools.

708-812.5 Burglary offenses; intent to commit therein a crime against a person or against property rights.

708-812.6 Unauthorized entry in a dwelling in the second degree.

708-812.55 Unauthorized entry in a dwelling in the first degree.

708-813 Criminal trespass in the first degree.

708-814 Criminal trespass in the second degree.

708-814.5 Criminal trespass onto public parks and recreational grounds.

708-814.7 Criminal trespass onto state lands.

708-815 Simple trespass. § §708-813 To 708-815 Commentary:

708-816 Defense to trespass.

708-816.5 Entry upon the premises of a facility utilized as a sex, child, or spouse abuse shelter; penalty. [(1)] No person shall knowingly enter or remain unlawfully upon the premises of a facility utilized as a sex abuse, child abuse, or spouse abu...

708-817 Burglary of a dwelling during an emergency period.

708-818 Burglary of a building during an emergency period.

708-820 Criminal property damage in the first degree.

708-821 Criminal property damage in the second degree.

708-822 Criminal property damage in the third degree.

708-823 Criminal property damage in the fourth degree. § §708-820 To 708-823 Commentary:

708-823.5 Aggravated criminal property damage.

708-823.6 Graffiti; sentencing.

708-824 Failure to control widely dangerous means. §708-824 Commentary:

708-825 Criminal tampering; definitions of terms.

708-826 Criminal tampering in the first degree.

708-827 Criminal tampering in the second degree.

708-828 Criminal use of a noxious substance. §708-828 Commentary:

708-829 Criminal littering. §708-829 Commentary:

708-830 Theft.

708-830.5 Theft in the first degree.

708-831 Theft in the second degree.

708-832 Theft in the third degree.

708-833 Theft in the fourth degree. § §708-830 To 708-833 Commentary:

708-833.5 Shoplifting.

708-834 Defenses: unawareness of ownership; claim of right; household belongings; co-interest not a defense. §708-834 Commentary:

708-835 Proof of theft offense. §708-835 Commentary:

708-835.4 Unauthorized operation of a recording device in a motion picture theater.

708-835.5 Theft of livestock.

708-835.6 Telemarketing fraud.

708-835.7 Theft of copper.

708-835.8 Theft of beer keg.

708-835.9 Theft of urn.

708-835.55 Theft; agricultural product; sentencing.

708-836 Unauthorized control of a propelled vehicle in the first degree. §708-836 Commentary:

708-836.1 Unauthorized control of a propelled vehicle in the second degree.

708-836.5 Unauthorized entry into motor vehicle in the first degree.

708-836.6 Unauthorized entry into motor vehicle in the second degree.

708-837 Failure to return a rental motor vehicle; penalty.

708-837.5 Failure to return leased or rented personal property; penalty.

708-838 Removal of identification marks.

708-839 Unlawful possession.

708-839.5 Theft of utility services. (1) For purposes of this section: "Customer" means the person in whose name the utility service is provided. "Divert" means to change the intended course or path of utility services without the authorization or co...

708-839.6 Identity theft in the first degree.

708-839.7 Identity theft in the second degree. (1) A person commits the offense of identity theft in the second degree if that person makes or causes to be made, either directly or indirectly, a transmission of any personal information of another by...

708-839.8 Identity theft in the third degree. (1) A person commits the offense of identity theft in the third degree if that person makes or causes to be made, either directly or indirectly, a transmission of any personal information of another by an...

708-839.55 Unauthorized possession of confidential personal information.

708-840 Robbery in the first degree.

708-841 Robbery in the second degree. § §708-840 And 708-841 Commentary:

708-842 Robbery; "in the course of committing a theft". §708-842 Commentary:

708-850 Definitions of terms in this part.

708-851 Forgery in the first degree.

708-852 Forgery in the second degree.

708-853 Forgery in the third degree. § §708-851 To 708-853 Commentary:

708-854 Criminal possession of a forgery device.

708-855 Criminal simulation.

708-856 Obtaining signature by deception.

708-857 Negotiating a worthless negotiable instrument. §708-857 Commentary:

708-858 Suppressing a testamentary or recordable instrument.

708-870 Deceptive business practices. §708-870 Commentary:

708-871 False advertising. §708-871 Commentary:

708-871.5 False labeling of Hawaii-grown coffee.

708-872 Falsifying business records. §708-872 Commentary:

708-873 Defrauding secured creditors. §708-873 Commentary:

708-874 Misapplication of entrusted property. §708-874 Commentary:

708-875 Trademark counterfeiting.

708-880 Commercial bribery. §708-880 Commentary:

708-881 Tampering with a publicly-exhibited contest. §708-881 Commentary:

708-890 to 708-896 REPEALED. §708-890 Definitions.

708-891 to 708-893 OLD REPEALED. §708-891 Computer fraud in the first degree.

708-891.5 Computer fraud in the second degree.

708-891.6 Computer fraud in the third degree.

708-892 Computer damage in the first degree.

708-892.5 Computer damage in the second degree.

708-892.6 Computer damage in the third degree.

708-893 Use of a computer in the commission of a separate crime.

708-894 Forfeiture of property used in computer crimes.

708-895 Jurisdiction.

708-895.5 Unauthorized computer access in the first degree.

708-895.6 Unauthorized computer access in the second degree.

708-895.7 Unauthorized computer access in the third degree.

708-8100 Fraudulent use of a credit card.

708-8100.5 Fraudulent encoding of a credit card. (1) A person commits the offense of fraudulent encoding of a credit card if, with the intent to defraud the issuer, or another person or organization providing money, goods, services or anything else o...

708-8101 Making a false statement to procure issuance of a credit card.

708-8102 Theft, forgery, etc., of credit cards.

708-8103 Credit card fraud by a provider of goods or services.

708-8104 Possession of unauthorized credit card machinery or incomplete cards.

708-8105 Credit card lists prohibited; penalty.

708-8106 Defenses not available.

708-8120 and 708-8121 REPEALED.

708-8200 Cable television service fraud in the first degree.

708-8201 Cable television service fraud in the second degree.

708-8202 Telecommunication service fraud in the first degree.

708-8203 Telecommunication service fraud in the second degree.

708-8204 Forfeiture of telecommunication service device and cable television service device.

708-8251 Arson in the first degree.

708-8252 Arson in the second degree.

708-8253 Arson in the third degree.

708-8254 Arson in the fourth degree.

708-8300 Unlicensed contracting activity.

708-8301 Habitual unlicensed contracting activity; felony.

708-8302 Unlicensed contractor fraud.

708-8303 Unlicensed contractor fraud in the first degree.

708-8304 Unlicensed contractor fraud in the second degree.

708-8305 Unlicensed contractor fraud; valuation of property.