Humble’s mix of residential growth, busy retail corridors, and commuter traffic can create predictable safety problems when properties don’t adapt. In these cases, the question usually isn’t “did crime happen?”—it’s whether the property should have anticipated the risk and took reasonable steps to reduce it.
For example, claims commonly focus on conditions that make an incident more likely or harder to stop, such as:
- inadequate lighting in parking areas used by residents, employees, or visitors
- doors, gates, or access points that don’t lock properly or are routinely left unsecured
- missing or nonfunctioning surveillance cameras covering entrances, breezeways, or corridors
- poor response practices after staff were notified of threats or suspicious activity
Texas law looks at duty, breach, and causation, but the practical proof often comes down to whether the owner had notice of similar problems or warning signs—plus whether their security plan matched the environment.


