Negligent Security
Negligent Security Claims in South Florida
A business that invites you in owes you more than a product. Florida law requires property owners to take reasonable steps to protect lawful visitors from foreseeable criminal acts. When a bar, a gas station, or an apartment complex ignores a danger it knew about and someone gets hurt, the owner can be held responsible in civil court. Even if the attacker is never caught.
The Claim
What a Negligent Security Claim Is
Negligent security is premises liability applied to violence: the owner who knew crime was coming to the property, did nothing reasonable to stop it, and now answers for the injury in civil court. That's the definition. The full explainer, including how foreseeability works and what the criminal case does and doesn't have to do with yours, is in our post on what negligent security means in Florida.
The attacker never being arrested does not end the civil case. The criminal case is the State of Florida against the person who did it, and it stalls whenever the police can't identify a suspect. The civil case is yours, and it targets the owner, not the attacker. You don't need an arrest. You don't need a conviction. You don't even need to know who did it.
Nobody plans to read a page like this. If you're here, something has probably already happened, at a place you never thought twice about. So this page is about how we handle these cases: where they happen, what Florida law now requires of property owners, what a claim can recover, and why the investigation has to start early. If the violence happened at a bar or club, we also wrote a companion piece on suing a nightclub or bar after a shooting. And these cases do something beyond compensating one family. They push businesses to fix the conditions that got someone hurt: the complex that finally repairs the gate, the club that finally staffs the door.
Why Speed Matters
Why These Cases Get Investigated Fast
Surveillance footage gets overwritten. At most properties the system records over itself in days or weeks, and the video of the incident, the empty guard post, and the propped-open gate goes with it. Once it's gone, no lawsuit gets it back.
So the first days follow a checklist of our own. The preservation letter goes out before the footage cycles. A public-records request goes in for the prior 911 calls to that address, stretching back years, because that call log is how an owner's notice gets proven. We pull the crime data for the parcel and the blocks around it. We photograph the property at the same hour the attack happened, since a parking lot at noon says nothing about that lot at 1 a.m. And the incident reports, security logs, and staffing schedules get demanded before they're purged or "lost." Owners don't volunteer any of it.
And witnesses scatter. The bartender quits. The guard moves to another site. The neighbor who saw the gate broken for months moves out. Memories fade fastest in the first weeks, which is exactly when nobody in a grieving family feels like calling a lawyer. We understand that. It's also why we say this plainly: the two-year deadline is the outside limit, not the plan. The case that gets investigated in week one is a different case than the one that starts in year two.
Negligent security is part of our personal injury practice, handled the same way: on contingency, prepared for trial from day one, with no fee unless we recover for you.