Kannapolis has a mix of residential neighborhoods, retail corridors, and properties that see frequent foot traffic—plus residents who commute across the region for work and school. That environment can make “simple” incidents escalate when access control, lighting, staffing, or response protocols fall short.
Residents often come to us after incidents tied to:
- Apartment and multi-family properties: broken door hardware, uncontrolled entry, malfunctioning entry systems, or inadequate camera coverage in common areas.
- Retail and shopping-area parking: poor lighting, limited supervision, gates that don’t reliably secure lots, or delayed response after threatening behavior.
- Hotels and visitor-heavy locations: screening failures, inadequate monitoring of entrances/exits, or slow handling of prior threats.
- Workforce and after-hours risk: incidents occurring during shift change, late evening hours, or periods when staffing is reduced.
Every case turns on the specific facts, but the pattern is the same: when criminal conduct is foreseeable and the property owner doesn’t take reasonable steps to reduce the risk, injured people may have a civil path to seek compensation.


