In Union, many incidents happen in places where people come and go—retail areas, apartment complexes, parking areas, and public-facing entrances. When something goes wrong (a robbery, assault, stalking behavior, or other harmful conduct), the legal focus usually shifts to whether the danger was reasonably foreseeable to the property owner or business.
That foreseeability question is often connected to local, practical realities, such as:
- High foot-traffic at certain times (evenings, weekends, shift changes)
- Parking-lot access points that are poorly lit or too easy to enter
- Shared entrances in multi-unit housing where residents and visitors overlap
- Inconsistent security staffing during busy hours
- Delayed responses after a reported threat or suspicious activity
Your strongest path forward is typically showing that the property operator had notice of similar problems—or warning signs—yet security measures were not adequate for the risk.


