Under C.G.S. §53a-135, a person commits second-degree robbery if they commit third-degree robbery with help from someone else actually present for the offense or if they display or threaten to use a deadly weapon while committing the offense or fleeing from the immediate area afterward. It is also considered second-degree robbery if someone threatens or intimidates any employee of a bank, state credit union, or federal credit union while committing an act of larceny inside. Second-degree robbery is a class C felony.