In a suburban community, many incidents aren’t “random.” They often happen in predictable locations and moments—after work, during a night visit, in a parking area, near an entrance used by residents or customers.
Negligent security is the legal theory used when a property owner or business failed to take reasonable steps to protect people from foreseeable criminal or harmful conduct. In Vandalia, that may involve allegations connected to:
- Parking lots and garages where lighting, cameras, or supervision were inadequate
- Apartment and multi-unit entrances where access control wasn’t functioning or was easily bypassed
- Retail areas and service entrances where staffing or response protocols were insufficient
- After-hours risks around common areas used by residents, employees, and visitors
Ohio law focuses on duty, foreseeability, and whether the property’s safety measures were reasonable in context. The practical challenge is proving what the owner knew (or should have known) before your incident.


