Security Expert Witness Analysis: Inadequate Security
Security Expert Witness Case Analysis: A woman drove her car into the parking lot of a US based retailer. She secured a parking space abutting a pedestrian walkway that ran perpendicular from the store’s entrance/exit down the middle of the parking lot. As she exited her car and turned right onto the walkway the woman was unaware that she was being observed by two males that were “cruising” the lot in a stolen automobile. As the woman was approaching the end of the walkway a car passed in front of her (from her left to right) then made a right turn, against the traffic pattern, and began to slow down. As the car slowed, a man seated in the passenger’s seat jumped out of the car as it rolled to a stop. The man quickly approached the woman from behind just as she arrived at the end of the walkway and lunged at the handbag the woman was carrying over her shoulder. The force of the attack caused the woman to be pulled backwards onto the ground. The man continued trying to pry the purse away from the woman but the woman would not relent. As the fruitlessness of his endeavor quickly became apparent to the assailant, he retreated back to the car from which he came. The car sped away, leaving the woman on the ground suffering from multiple injuries, requiring emergency medical attention.
Security Expert Witness Analysis: Research revealed that parking lot incidents were not uncommon to this retailer rather; they represented a majority of the reported on-premises incidents. Moreover, the retailer possessed significant prior knowledge of these incidents, the elevated potential for Aggravated Assault at the address and accepted responsibility for securing the parking lot. In order to assist in reducing incident occurrence in their parking lot the retailer employed the services of a contract security service, the selected provider was contractually mandated by the retailer to provide “continuous patrol” of the parking lot area. A review of testimony and video of the incident concluded that, using one security patrol vehicle, the security firm could complete one round of the premises every fifteen minutes. The review also revealed that approximately three plus minutes of every round was dedicated to patrolling the area behind the retailer’s building. When scheduled breaks and lunch were factored into the equation the front parking lot was void of security protection approximately twenty-five percent of every hour. The woman in question was assaulted in the front parking lot during one of those times when the roving security patrol was patrolling the area behind the store. It is also clear from the provided material that the retailer failed to provide an adequate number of security patrol /vehicles for the size and known risk of the premises. It was the opinion of this consultant that the injuries sustained by the woman were the direct result of the conduct of the retailer.