“Labor Omnia Vincit” McKay Law​

Collinsville, OK Negligent Security Accident Lawyer

Inadequate security claims are particularly challenging and sensitive in Collinsville, OK. When property owners fail to provide reasonable security and someone is assaulted, robbed, or killed, holding the property owner accountable becomes critical. McKay Law represents negligent security victims throughout OK. Negligent security cases present unique challenges—showing the owner knew or should have known about the risk and failed to act. Inadequate security claims frequently arise from residential properties, commercial businesses, hospitality venues, and public gathering places. These cases can involve violent attacks, sexual assaults, robberies, and homicides on unsecured properties. Determining liability takes specialized expertise—under premises liability and negligence principles. Our Collinsville negligent security attorneys investigate every angle—police reports of prior crimes on or near the property, surveillance footage, security personnel records, maintenance logs for locks and lighting, witness statements, and property management communications. These cases typically need industry specialists to demonstrate how proper measures would have prevented the attack. We pursue claims against every party whose decisions or inaction contributed to the dangerous conditions. These claims involve coverage issues—with coverage disputes over intentional acts exclusions and additional insured issues. Victims often suffer life-altering harm—both physical wounds and profound psychological impact. We recover all available damages including medical bills, mental health treatment, lost wages, lost earning capacity, pain and suffering, emotional distress, and wrongful death damages. Defendants will try to blame only the criminal attacker—you deserve representation that understands how to win these challenging cases. All inadequate security claims is handled on a contingency fee basis—zero upfront cost. Call McKay Law now for a free consultation with a Collinsville, OK premises liability attorney who will hold every negligent property owner and entity accountable.

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Negligent Security Accident Lawyer in Collinsville, OK | McKay Law

Negligent Security Attorney in Collinsville, OK | McKay Law

Understanding Negligent Security Claims

Property owners have a legal duty to protect visitors from foreseeable criminal acts. When security failures lead to crime victimization, the property owner can be held liable. These are negligent security cases. Negligent security cases involve apartment complexes, hotels, parking lots, shopping centers, bars, nightclubs, and other locations where poor security led to crime. McKay Law represents negligent security victims in Collinsville and throughout Oklahoma.

Where These Cases Happen

  • Apartment complexes
  • Hotels and motels
  • Shopping centers
  • Parking
  • Convenience stores and gas stations
  • Bars and nightclubs
  • Restaurants
  • ATMs
  • Banks
  • Hospitals and medical facilities
  • Office buildings
  • Stadium and concert venues
  • Transit
  • Casinos
  • Schools
  • Self-storage facilities
  • Churches

Common Types of Crimes in Negligent Security Cases

  • Physical assault
  • Sexual assault
  • Robbery
  • Carjacking
  • Active shooter
  • Gun violence
  • Knife attacks
  • Homicide
  • Domestic violence
  • Drug-related violence
  • Gang-related criminal acts
  • Bias-motivated violence
  • Kidnapping

Common Security Failures

  • Inadequate lighting
  • Failed locks
  • Camera failures
  • Lack of security guards
  • Untrained or inadequate security guards
  • Open access
  • No key cards, codes, or controlled entry
  • Unmonitored cameras
  • Ignoring known crime in the area
  • Not warning of known dangers
  • Bad tenant screening
  • Not removing dangerous tenants
  • Bad emergency procedures

Inadequate Security Standards

Security must be reasonable under the circumstances:

  • Foreseeability of crime
  • The type of property and surrounding neighborhood
  • The level of crime in the surrounding area
  • Crime type
  • Standards for similar businesses
  • Whether reasonable measures would have prevented the crime

Establishing Foreseeability

For these cases to succeed, you must establish that the crime was foreseeable. This can be shown through:

  • Historical crime data
  • Crime in the surrounding area
  • Complaints about security to management
  • Prior incidents
  • Industry security standards
  • Threats made before the incident
  • Visible crime indicators

Common Injuries in Negligent Security Cases

  • Gunshot wounds
  • Edged weapon injuries
  • Traumatic brain injuries
  • Paralysis from violence
  • Broken bones
  • Internal trauma
  • Permanent visible damage
  • Sexual assault trauma
  • PTSD and severe psychological damage
  • Diseases transmitted through assault
  • Pregnancy from sexual violence
  • Lasting disability
  • Wrongful death

Potential Defendants

  • Property owners
  • Apartment complex owners
  • Hotel owners
  • Shopping center owners
  • Property management companies
  • Security companies
  • Restaurant and bar operators
  • Government for public spaces
  • Schools
  • Employers

Elements of Your Claim

  • A Duty of Care — There was a duty of reasonable security.
  • Breach — Security failures occurred.
  • That the Crime Was Foreseeable — The crime was foreseeable based on the circumstances.
  • Causation — The security failure caused or contributed to the crime.
  • Damages — The full financial and personal toll.

What Strengthens a Negligent Security Case

  • Photographs of the scene
  • Video evidence
  • Police reports
  • Historical crime data
  • Prior crime
  • Prior complaints
  • Documentation of security policies
  • Security records
  • Service records for security equipment
  • Expert testimony on security standards
  • Witness statements
  • Industry standards
  • Medical records

Damages Available

  • Medical bills, past and future
  • Long-term care and rehabilitation
  • Mental health treatment
  • Lost wages and diminished earning ability
  • Physical and emotional suffering
  • Loss of enjoyment of life
  • Loss of companionship
  • Lasting disability
  • Damages for visible damage
  • Wrongful death compensation when the crime was fatal
  • Exemplary damages when warranted

Special Considerations for Sexual Assault Cases

These cases have unique aspects:

  • Confidential proceedings often possible
  • Privacy concerns
  • Substantial damages
  • Mental health damages
  • Ongoing medical and mental health care
  • Criminal coordination
  • Special trauma-informed representation

Filing Deadline

The deadline in Oklahoma is two years from the date of the incident to file (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95). Sexual assault cases may have extended deadlines under certain circumstances. For child victims, the limitations period may extend.

What Working With Us Looks Like

We move quickly to lock down video evidence, build foreseeability evidence, obtain prior complaints, retain security experts, work with criminal proceedings, protect client privacy in sensitive cases, work with medical and mental health providers, and build each file for the courtroom from the start.

FAQ

Q: I was assaulted at an apartment complex — can I file a claim?

A: Likely yes if you can establish foreseeability and security failures.

Q: What does it cost to hire McKay Law?

A: Zero upfront. No fee unless we recover.

Q: I was attacked in a parking lot — can the property owner be sued?

A: Yes, in qualifying cases.

Q: I was sexually assaulted at a hotel — what’s my claim?

A: Hotels can be liable for sexual assault. These cases often involve significant damages.

Q: What does “foreseeable” mean?

A: Reasonably predictable. Foreseeability is typically established through prior incidents, neighborhood crime, or specific threats.

Q: My family member was killed in a violent crime — what can we do?

A: Wrongful death cases are available for negligent security deaths.

Q: Should I give the property owner’s insurance a recorded statement?

A: No. Talk to a lawyer first.

Q: Should I preserve evidence at the scene?

A: Yes — when possible. Visual evidence of inadequate security is important.

Q: What is the deadline to file?

A: Two years from the date of the incident (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95). For minors, the deadline may be tolled until age 18.

Compensation for Inadequate Security Injuries in Collinsville, OK

Negligent security is a specialized form of premises liability. The injury was caused by a criminal — but the case isn’t against the criminal. The case is against the property owner who failed to provide adequate security. This is its own area of law. A local attorney experienced with these claims builds these cases around the actual legal framework.

Why These Cases Are Legally Distinctive

Holding the Property Owner Responsible for Criminal Acts of Others

The core question in negligent security is whether property owners can be liable for criminal acts committed by third parties.

General rule: property owners generally aren’t liable for criminal acts of third parties.

Multiple exceptions apply.

The Foreseeability Doctrine

The central legal concept in negligent security.

These cases require foreseeability of the criminal act.

Foreseeability is shown through evidence of prior similar incidents.

Special Relationships

Certain relationships create elevated duties for security:

  • Property owners to tenants
  • Hotels to guests
  • Carriers to passengers
  • Establishments to customers

How Foreseeability Gets Established

Prior Crime on the Property

Prior incidents on the premises establishes foreseeability directly.

Evidence of prior crimes should include:

  • Specific crime reports involving the property
  • Police documentation
  • Complaints to the owner
  • Property security reports

Crime in the Surrounding Area

Area crime statistics can establish foreseeability when the surrounding area has documented crime.

Sources for area crime data include:

  • Police crime statistics
  • Crime data services
  • Neighborhood crime reports

Property Owner’s Knowledge

Evidence the owner knew about crime can establish foreseeability:

  • Reports received by the owner
  • Complaints from tenants or customers
  • The owner’s own statements or admissions
  • Insurance underwriting documents identifying risk

Inherent Nature of the Property

Some properties have inherently elevated security risks:

  • Bars and clubs
  • High-volume retail in late hours
  • Multi-family housing
  • Hotels in high-risk areas
  • Parking lots and parking garages
  • Financial facilities
  • Risk-area convenience stores

Types of Negligent Security Cases

Robbery and Theft

Robbery incidents.

Assault and Battery

Physical assault cases.

Sexual Assault

Sexual assault cases.

These are particularly serious cases.

Shooting Incidents

Gun violence incidents involve specific issues.

Mass Shooting and Active Shooter Incidents

Mass casualty events generate negligent security claims.

Apartment Complex Violence

Multi-family housing crime generates significant case volume.

Hotel Crime

Hotel-related violence and theft can support negligent security claims.

Parking Lot and Garage Incidents

Parking lot and garage crime generates significant case volume.

Workplace Violence

Employer-related workplace violence.

What Adequate Security Actually Looks Like

Adequacy varies by property type.

Security components include:

Lighting

Adequate exterior and interior lighting.

Inadequate lighting is a frequent contributing cause.

Surveillance Cameras

Operational camera coverage.

Cameras must function:

  • Strategically placed
  • Functional and recording
  • Regularly maintained
  • Watched where the standard requires

Security Personnel

On-site security, particularly for risk-elevated properties.

Access Control

Access controls.

Locking Systems

Working locks.

Communication Systems

Emergency communications, including alarm systems.

Landscaping and Maintenance

Landscaping that doesn’t create concealment opportunities.

Policies and Training

Security procedures, Training programs, incident response protocols.

Common Security Failures

Inadequate Lighting

Inadequate lighting for criminals.

Broken or Non-Functional Cameras

Cameras that don’t work fail to provide evidence after crimes.

Inadequate Security Personnel

Inadequate guards considering risk.

Failure to Implement Recommended Security

Property owners who received security assessments but failed to implement recommendations face heightened liability.

Failed Access Controls

Inadequate access control systems.

Untrained Security Staff

Untrained security personnel.

Ignored Complaints

Disregarded complaints face heightened liability.

Damages in Negligent Security Cases

Recoverable losses include include:

Medical Costs

Initial emergency treatment, surgical costs, hospitalization, rehabilitation, Long-term medical needs, mental health treatment (often substantial).

Lost Wages and Earning Capacity

Lost wages and long-term wage impact.

Pain and Suffering

Physical pain and suffering.

Mental Health Damages

PTSD is common after negligent security incidents drive significant damages.

Loss of Enjoyment of Life

Loss of enjoyment.

Loss of Consortium

Spousal damages.

Wrongful Death

Wrongful death claims.

Punitive Damages

Negligent security cases frequently support punitive damages, especially where:

  • Owner-known criminal pattern
  • Disregarded recommendations
  • Security personnel failure
  • Egregious conduct

Who Can Be Held Liable?

Property Owner

The property owner is the primary defendant.

Property Management Company

Property managers carry liability.

Security Company

Security contractors may bear primary responsibility for inadequate security.

Premises Owners and Operators

Different parties may own and operate the property can share liability.

Franchisors

For franchised establishments (hotels, restaurants, etc.), franchisors may face liability in some circumstances.

Common Insurance Defenses

“The Crime Wasn’t Foreseeable”

The primary defense.

Foreseeability challenges. Documentation of prior crime defeats this defense.

“We Provided Reasonable Security”

Defense argues the security provided was reasonable.

“Security Failures Didn’t Cause the Crime”

“Better security wouldn’t have prevented this”.

“The Plaintiff Was at Fault”

“You contributed to your own harm”.

“The Criminal Is Solely Responsible”

Sole-criminal-responsibility arguments. This argument generally fails because liability can rest on the property owner regardless of the criminal’s responsibility.

Critical Steps After a Negligent Security Incident

Report to Law Enforcement

Insist on law enforcement involvement. Police reports are essential.

Get Medical Attention Immediately

Prompt medical evaluation protects the claim.

Document Everything About the Property

Property-related details.

Note Security Failures Observed

Security deficiencies.

Photograph the Property

Visual evidence of every relevant detail.

Identify Witnesses

Other people at the property.

Don’t Wait to Investigate Crime History

Prior crime evidence should be gathered.

Get Mental Health Treatment

Psychological treatment require professional care.

Don’t Speak With Property Owner Insurers Without Counsel

Insurance company representatives. Recorded statements before legal advice can permanently damage the case.

Attorney Costs

Counsel handling these cases work on contingency. These cases require significant investment in security experts, crime analysts, and other experts advanced by the firm.

Move Quickly

Evidence has preservation windows.

Camera evidence gets overwritten quickly.

Personnel changes requiring prompt investigation.

Property owners often change security after incidents, which can be used as evidence of inadequacy.

The legal time limit continues running.

Engaging counsel right away locks down the critical evidence.

McKay Law Is Your Collinsville Advocate After A Negligent Security Accident

When a assault happens in a parking lot, hotel hallway, apartment complex, or store, the criminal is rarely the only one responsible. Property owners have a legal duty to keep reasonable security for everyone they invite onto their premises — and when they neglect that duty, foreseeable crimes happen and innocent people get hurt. Negligent security claims develop when a property had a pattern of prior crimes that should have prompted action, when known hazards like broken locks, dead security cameras, burned-out parking lot lights, missing security personnel, and unsecured access points were left unaddressed, and when reasonable measures — proper lighting, working surveillance, trained guards, access controls — would have stopped the attack. At McKay Law, we handle these cases by examining the property’s crime history, prior complaints to management, security audits, police call records, and the owner’s response — or non-response — to known risks. We consult security experts, crime prevention specialists, and former law enforcement to demonstrate exactly what a reasonable owner would have done and why this owner failed.

Apartment complexes, hotels, parking garages, shopping centers, bars and nightclubs, ATMs, gas stations, college campuses, and event venues all carry significant legal responsibility for the safety of the people they invite onto their property. When you come into the McKay Law family, we fight for compensation that conveys the full scope of what was taken from you — physical and emotional. We chase complete compensation for emergency care, surgeries, hospitalization, ongoing rehabilitation, future medical needs, prescription costs, counseling and psychiatric care for trauma and PTSD, time away from work, diminished earning ability, the life-altering fear, anxiety, and emotional aftermath of being assaulted in a place that was supposed to be safe — and in the most heartbreaking cases, the wrongful death of a precious life. Call us today at (866) 679-9651 or connect with us online to set up your free, confidential consultation and put a firm that treats crimes against innocent victims with the seriousness they deserve in your corner.

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