In Sand Springs, many properties serve a mix of residents, visitors, and workers moving through shared spaces—parking lots, building entries, hallways, and after-hours access points. Negligent security cases often start with a simple question: what risks were foreseeable for that location, at that time, and what did the owner do (or fail to do) about them?
Common patterns we see include:
- Parking lot and entryway assaults where lighting, surveillance coverage, or access control didn’t match the risk level
- Apartment or multi-unit incidents tied to door/lock issues, broken access systems, or failure to act on prior complaints
- Retail and service-location incidents involving inadequate monitoring, delayed response, or malfunctioning alarms/cameras
- After-hours harm where the property’s staffing, procedures, or response plan didn’t account for the real flow of people
Oklahoma law focuses on whether security precautions were reasonable under the circumstances—not on whether safety was guaranteed.


