In suburban communities like New Baltimore, security disputes frequently turn on whether the property had notice of risk and whether its response matched what a reasonable operator would do in similar conditions.
Common local scenarios include:
- Parking lot assaults after late shifts, errands, or weekend activity—especially where lighting, cameras, or supervision were inadequate.
- Apartment or condo incidents involving unlocked doors, ineffective access control, or failure to address prior threats and complaints.
- Businesses with customer or employee foot traffic where entry points, monitoring, or staff response procedures didn’t match the danger.
- Incidents near stairwells, corridors, or overflow areas where a lack of visibility and maintenance can make harm more likely.
Michigan law doesn’t require a property owner to guarantee safety. The key is whether the security measures were reasonable in light of what they knew—or should have known—about foreseeable risk.


