A negligent security claim arises when a person is injured by a third-party criminal act that was foreseeable given the conditions on a property, and the property owner failed to take reasonable steps to prevent it. This is a form of premises liability recognized under Kentucky law, grounded in the principle that business owners and property managers owe their guests, tenants, and customers a duty of care that includes protecting them from foreseeable criminal conduct on the premises. The key legal word is foreseeable. A property owner cannot be held liable for every random act of violence in the world, but when prior crime on the property, poor lighting, broken locks, or an absence of any meaningful security system created the conditions that made your injury predictable, the law places responsibility squarely on the party who controlled those conditions.
Under KRS Chapter 411, Kentucky recognizes civil tort claims for injuries caused by a property owner’s negligence, including failures related to security and the safety of business invitees. Courts have consistently applied the principle that a defendant’s duty runs to injuries that are the natural and probable consequence of a negligent act, and criminal assaults that occur in environments where prior incidents have put an owner on notice fall squarely within that framework. Foreseeability is the linchpin, and it is built from prior incident reports, police call logs to the property, crime statistics in the surrounding area, and any internal communications showing that management was aware of security deficiencies and chose not to address them.
Louisville’s entertainment districts, dense apartment corridors along major arterials, hotel clusters near the airport and downtown convention center, and the parking infrastructure surrounding venues like KFC Yum Center and Churchill Downs all generate substantial negligent security exposure when owners prioritize cost savings over the safety of the people using their properties. Whether you were attacked in a parking garage, sexually assaulted at a hotel, robbed in an apartment complex stairwell, or seriously injured at a bar or nightclub anywhere in Jefferson County or throughout the Commonwealth, Forman & Associates has the trial experience and the investigative resources to build a case that captures everything you are owed.
Most victims of assaults and violent crimes on commercial or residential property do not immediately recognize that they may have a civil claim against the property owner in addition to any criminal case against the perpetrator. The criminal justice process moves on its own timeline and addresses punishment, not your financial recovery. Meanwhile, the property owner’s liability insurer begins evaluating its exposure from the moment the incident is reported, often before the victim has left the hospital. Property management companies conduct their own internal incident reviews, shaped entirely by the company’s interest in minimizing liability rather than accurately documenting what security failures contributed to the attack. Surveillance footage, which is frequently the most important piece of evidence in a negligent security case, is often stored on overwrite loops as short as 24 to 72 hours. Once it is gone, it is gone.
The steps you take in the first days after a negligent security injury directly shape the strength of your civil claim. Report the incident to law enforcement and obtain a copy of the police report, since responding officers document conditions at the scene that may not exist in the same form when your case is later investigated. Seek medical attention immediately and follow all prescribed treatment consistently, because gaps in your treatment record will be used by the defense to minimize the severity of your injuries. Document the physical environment with photographs if you are able to do so safely, including the absence of security cameras, broken locks, burned-out lights, and any other conditions that contributed to the attack. Do not provide any recorded statement to the property’s management company, their insurer, or any representative acting on their behalf before speaking with a negligent security lawyer.
What many victims do not understand is that the property owner’s insurer and the perpetrator’s criminal case are not the same thing, and settling one does not resolve the other. Your civil claim against the negligent property owner is entirely independent of any criminal prosecution. Forman & Associates issues immediate legal preservation demands to property owners, their management companies, their security contractors, and their insurers the moment we take your case, locking down surveillance footage, security staffing records, prior incident reports, and the property’s full crime history before that evidence can be lost, altered, or withheld.
The evidence that wins a negligent security case is controlled almost entirely by the property owner in the critical hours following an attack, and they have every financial incentive to manage what gets preserved and what disappears. Surveillance footage that would show the absence of security personnel, the broken gate that allowed access, or the inadequately lit area where the attack occurred is subject to automatic deletion within days without a legal hold. Staffing logs that document who was on duty and where they were assigned are internal records that can be conveniently unavailable if legal action does not compel their preservation. Prior crime reports involving the same property, which establish that the owner had notice of a pattern of dangerous incidents, must be obtained through formal legal demands and sometimes through public records requests to local law enforcement. The Bureau of Justice Statistics consistently documents that violent crimes in commercial and residential settings disproportionately affect victims who had no reason to anticipate the threat, underscoring exactly why the responsibility lies with those who controlled the environment.
Negligent security cases require a different investigative approach than most personal injury claims because the liability turns not on a single act of carelessness but on a pattern of inaction. Your negligent security lawyer must build a case showing that the property owner knew or should have known that criminal activity was a foreseeable risk on their premises, that they had the ability to take reasonable steps to reduce that risk, and that their failure to do so created the specific conditions that made your attack possible. This means obtaining police call logs for the address, reviewing prior incident reports filed with management, examining security staffing contracts, inspecting the physical layout of the property for known crime facilitation factors like poor lighting and limited sight lines, and retaining security industry experts who can testify to what reasonable property owners in comparable situations routinely do to protect their patrons. Evidence of prior similar crimes on the property is often the most powerful element of the case, and courts have recognized that a property owner’s awareness of ongoing criminal activity creates a duty to respond to it under Kentucky premises liability principles.
At Forman & Associates, we take control of the negligent security investigation from the moment we are retained. We identify every responsible party, from the direct property owner to the management company and the third-party security contractor, issue legal preservation demands for all documentation and footage, and retain the security industry experts and investigators necessary to build the full picture of the property owner’s notice and inaction. We communicate directly with every insurer and responsible party so that you are not navigating a process specifically designed to exhaust and confuse you. We never advise a client to accept any offer from a negligent property owner’s carrier until we have built the complete liability case and the full damages picture, because the first offer is never the one that reflects what your injury actually cost you.
Landlords and property management companies owe tenants and their guests a duty to maintain reasonably secure common areas, including parking lots, hallways, stairwells, laundry facilities, and entry points. When broken locks, malfunctioning access systems, inadequate lighting, or the absence of any security response to known crime patterns contribute to a tenant being attacked, the property owner bears civil liability for the resulting injuries.
Hotels hold themselves out as places of safety and comfort for paying guests. When a hotel fails to maintain functioning key card systems, employs no overnight security, ignores reports of threatening conduct, or books guests in areas it knows to be subject to recurring criminal activity, it bears direct liability when those guests are assaulted. These cases frequently involve incidents in parking areas, hallways, and rooms with compromised access controls.
Commercial parking structures are among the highest-risk environments for assaults, robberies, and carjackings. Property owners who operate parking facilities owe users a duty to provide adequate lighting, functioning surveillance systems, emergency call stations, and security patrols commensurate with the crime history of the location. Failure to provide these basic protections when they are known to be necessary creates clear civil liability.
Establishments that serve alcohol and attract large crowds bear a heightened duty to anticipate and prevent violence on their premises. Inadequate door staffing, failure to remove known aggressors, lack of functioning surveillance systems, and poor crowd control practices all contribute to foreseeable assaults that trigger both dram shop and negligent security liability depending on the circumstances.
Retail property owners who know that the crime rate in and around their properties is elevated have a responsibility to implement reasonable preventive measures. When those measures are absent or inadequate and a shopper is assaulted in a parking lot, a store, or a mall common area, the property owner's failure to act is the basis of the civil claim.
Educational institutions owe students and visitors a duty to maintain secure campus environments, including functional lighting, monitored access to dormitories and academic buildings, adequate safety response systems, and trained security personnel. When campus administrators are aware of prior incidents and fail to implement corrective measures, the institution may bear civil liability for subsequent attacks on the same property.
Victims of assaults and violent injuries on negligently secured properties are entitled to pursue full compensation for every economic and non-economic consequence of what happened to them. Unlike situations where the only defendant is an individual perpetrator who may have no assets, negligent security cases target the property owner, management company, and security contractor, all of whom typically carry commercial liability insurance with substantially higher policy limits. The quality of the legal team building the case determines whether that potential recovery is realized.
In a Kentucky negligent security lawsuit, recoverable damages typically include:
Punitive damages deserve particular attention in negligent security cases. When discovery reveals that a property owner received multiple reports of prior assaults, robberies, or other violent incidents on their property and took no meaningful action to improve security, a jury’s ability to award punitive damages becomes a powerful negotiating reality. The CDC’s research on violence prevention consistently reinforces that criminal violence in commercial settings is not random, it is patterned and often predictable, which is precisely why property owners who ignore those patterns bear responsibility for what follows.
Larry Forman has actually stood before juries and won. That track record is known in Kentucky legal circles — and it changes how the other side negotiates.
Surveillance footage, security staffing logs, prior incident reports, police call records, and property management communications are all time-sensitive. We issue preservation demands from the moment we take your case, before the property owner's team has the opportunity to manage what gets produced and what quietly disappears.
The foreseeability analysis that drives negligent security cases, the distinction between business invitees and licensees under KRS Chapter 411, the open and obvious defense and its limits, and the role of comparative fault in Kentucky premises liability claims are not abstract concepts to our team. They are the legal framework we navigate every day.
From expert witness retention to pattern-of-misconduct research, we build cases designed to win at trial — not just settle quickly to move to the next file.
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Yes. Negligent security claims hold property owners civilly liable not for committing the assault themselves, but for creating or failing to correct the conditions that made the assault foreseeable. Under Kentucky premises liability law, a property owner who knew that crime was occurring on or near their property and failed to implement reasonable security measures can be held responsible for the injuries a third party's criminal act causes to someone on that property. The perpetrator's own criminal liability does not eliminate the property owner's civil liability.
Foreseeability in a negligent security case is established through evidence showing that the property owner had prior notice of criminal activity on or near the premises. This evidence can include prior police reports for the same address, incident reports filed by tenants or guests, internal management communications acknowledging security concerns, surveillance footage of prior incidents, and crime statistics for the surrounding area. Courts evaluate whether a reasonable property owner in possession of this information would have recognized the need for improved security measures. The stronger the pattern of prior incidents, the more clearly foreseeable the next one becomes.
Under KRS 413.140, Kentucky's statute of limitations for personal injury claims is one year from the date of the injury. This deadline is strict and missing it almost certainly eliminates your right to any recovery. Equally important is the evidence preservation window, which is far shorter than the filing deadline. Surveillance footage is routinely deleted within 24 to 72 hours, and staffing records may be purged through routine document retention policies long before a lawsuit is filed. Contact a negligent security lawyer as soon as possible after your injury.
This is the most common defense in negligent security litigation, and it is defeated through prior incident evidence and expert testimony. A property owner who had no prior warning of criminal activity and no reason to anticipate it is in a fundamentally different position from one who had received multiple police calls, tenant complaints, or prior assault reports and did nothing. Our firm investigates the full history of the property, including law enforcement call logs and any internal communications, to establish exactly what the owner knew before the attack that injured you.
Kentucky follows a pure comparative fault system, meaning your recovery is reduced in proportion to any fault attributed to you, but it is not eliminated unless you are found entirely responsible. Defendants in negligent security cases frequently attempt to shift blame to victims by arguing they were in an unsafe area at an unsafe time, they failed to take precautions, or they provoked the situation. Our firm anticipates and counters these arguments with evidence focused on the property owner's knowledge, capabilities, and choices, rather than accepting a defense narrative that holds victims responsible for harm caused by a property owner's deliberate inaction.
Yes. Your civil negligent security claim against the property owner is entirely independent of the criminal case against the perpetrator. You do not need a criminal arrest, conviction, or even an identified suspect to pursue a civil claim against the property for failing to provide reasonable security. The civil standard of proof, a preponderance of the evidence, is significantly lower than the criminal standard and focuses on the property owner's conduct and awareness, not on the perpetrator's identity or criminal history.
Yes. Residential property owners and management companies owe tenants a duty to maintain reasonably safe common areas, including functioning access controls, adequate lighting, and timely responses to known security threats. Tenants who are assaulted in parking lots, hallways, stairwells, or laundry facilities of residential complexes where prior incidents gave the owner notice of an ongoing security problem have viable negligent security claims against their landlords and management companies. Wrongful death claims may also arise when a residential security failure results in a fatality.
The mere presence of a security system or security personnel is not automatically sufficient to defeat a negligent security claim. The question is whether the security measures in place were adequate given the known crime risk at that property. A single unarmed guard in a parking garage with a documented history of violent robberies may not constitute reasonable security, even though the property owner can point to their presence. Our firm retains security industry experts who evaluate the adequacy of security measures against professional standards and the specific risk profile of the property, not simply against a checklist of whether some form of security existed.
Yes. Forman & Associates represents negligent security victims throughout Kentucky and handles cases nationally. Whether your injury occurred at a Louisville hotel, a Lexington apartment complex, a Bowling Green retail center, or anywhere else in the Commonwealth, we are available to review your case at no cost. Contact us for a free consultation regardless of where in Kentucky the incident occurred.