In and around Rochester, injuries tied to unsafe premises commonly involve situations where pedestrian traffic, commuting patterns, and high-visibility public areas create predictable pressure on property owners and businesses. While every case is different, many incidents fall into patterns like these:
- Parking lots and after-hours entry points: Dim lighting, poorly maintained walkways, broken locks, or doors that don’t properly latch can make assaults and robberies more likely.
- Businesses with frequent foot traffic: Retail stores, service businesses, and offices that see predictable arrivals and departures (especially evenings) may face allegations that security was inadequate for the risk.
- Multi-unit housing and shared entrances: Residents and visitors can be exposed when access controls fail, guest entry is not monitored, or common areas are not maintained.
- Events and seasonal activity: When crowds swell around local attractions and community events, properties sometimes struggle with crowd management, monitoring, and response.
The legal question isn’t whether a property was “perfectly safe.” It’s whether the security steps taken were reasonable for the risks the property should have anticipated.


