A negligent security case typically starts when a property owner or business fails to take reasonable steps to protect people from foreseeable harm.
That doesn’t mean a property must guarantee safety. Instead, the question is whether the owner’s security choices matched the risk level they knew—or reasonably should have known about—at that time.
In Porterville, “foreseeability” often turns on practical, local details such as:
- Prior calls involving the same property or nearby entrances
- Complaints about lighting, broken locks, or unsafe access points
- Reports about aggressive activity in parking lots or common areas
- Whether cameras or monitoring systems were present and actually working
When security is inadequate and violence results, injured people may be able to pursue damages for medical bills, lost income, and the real emotional toll that can follow an assault.


