Dover is a community where people regularly move between neighborhoods, workplaces, and local businesses—often during early mornings, lunch hours, and nighttime commutes. When an assault, robbery, or stalking-related incident happens near a parking area, apartment entry, or business entrance, the key question becomes whether the property’s security matched the risk that could reasonably be expected.
In practice, Dover negligent security disputes frequently hinge on details like:
- Whether entrances and parking areas were well-lit at the time of the incident
- Whether doors/locks or access points worked as designed
- Whether security cameras existed, were positioned correctly, or were functioning
- Whether staff were trained to respond to threats or suspicious activity
- Whether prior calls, complaints, or similar incidents put the owner on notice
Ohio law generally focuses on duty, breach, and whether the property’s shortcomings contributed to the harm. That’s why the “foreseeable risk” facts—what the owner knew or should have known—matter as much as the incident itself.


