Concert Negligent Security Lawsuit in New York

Yes. If you were assaulted, shot, or seriously injured at a concert in New York because the venue failed to provide reasonable security, you may have a negligent security claim against the venue, promoter, or property owner. New York property owners owe patrons a duty to take reasonable measures to protect them from foreseeable criminal acts. Most personal injury claims must be filed within three years CPLR §214, but venues quickly overwrite footage, so act early.

Last updated July 2026
Laurence P. Banville, New York personal injury attorney
Laurence P. Banville Managing Partner · NY & D.C. Bars
The bottom line: If you were hurt by a foreseeable assault, shooting, stampede, or other violence at a New York concert venue that failed to provide reasonable security, you can usually bring a negligent security claim against the venue, promoter, or property owner. You generally have three years to file, and the strength of your case turns on whether the harm was foreseeable and what the venue should have done about it.

What negligent security law says in New York

Negligent security is a type of premises liability. Under New York law, a property owner or business that invites the public onto its property owes those guests a duty to keep the premises reasonably safe. When the danger is criminal activity by a third party, the owner has a duty to take minimal reasonable precautions to protect patrons from foreseeable harm. A concert venue is not an insurer of your safety and is not automatically responsible every time a crime occurs. The question the law asks is whether the venue acted reasonably in light of what it knew or should have known.

Most negligent security claims arising from a concert are governed by the standard three-year deadline for personal injury CPLR §214. If a city, county, or other public entity owns or operates the venue, much shorter rules apply, including a Notice of Claim within 90 days GML §50-e.

Who can be held liable

More than one party is often responsible for unsafe conditions at a concert. Depending on the facts, potential defendants include:

  • The venue or property owner for failing to staff, train, or deploy adequate security.
  • The concert promoter or event organizer who controlled crowd size, access, and the security plan.
  • A private security or crowd-management company hired for the event that performed negligently.
  • A management or staffing company responsible for day-to-day operations.

If the venue served alcohol to a visibly intoxicated person who then injured you, New York’s Dram Shop Act may add a separate claim against the seller GOL §11-101.

How foreseeability decides your case

Foreseeability is the heart of a New York negligent security claim. You generally must show the venue knew or should have known that criminal conduct was likely. Evidence that often establishes foreseeability includes:

  • Prior assaults, fights, shootings, or arrests at the same venue or similar events.
  • The nature of the act or audience and any history of crowd violence.
  • Known threats, gang activity, or warnings before the show.
  • Overselling, overcrowding, or unsecured entrances that invited danger.

Once foreseeability is shown, the question becomes whether the venue’s response was reasonable: were there enough trained guards, working metal detectors or bag checks, adequate lighting, functioning cameras, controlled entry points, and a workable emergency plan.

How the value of a claim is determined

No honest lawyer can promise a number, and prior results never guarantee future outcomes. What a claim is worth depends on factors a jury would weigh, including:

  • The severity and permanence of your injuries and the medical care required.
  • Past and future medical expenses and lost earning capacity.
  • Physical pain, emotional trauma, and the effect on your daily life.
  • How clearly the venue’s security failures contributed to what happened.
  • Available insurance coverage and the number of responsible parties.

New York follows pure comparative negligence, so your recovery can be reduced if your own conduct contributed to the injury, but you are not barred from recovering CPLR §1411.

Deadlines you cannot miss

For most concert negligent security claims against a private venue, you have three years from the date of injury to file suit CPLR §214. If the venue is government-owned, you typically must serve a Notice of Claim within 90 days and sue within roughly one year and 90 days GML §50-i. If someone died, a wrongful death claim has a two-year deadline EPTL §5-4.1. Because these windows differ and venues overwrite security footage quickly, the sooner you act, the better.

Common concert injury scenarios

Negligent security claims after concerts often arise from assaults or fights in crowds or parking lots, shootings or stabbings inside or outside the venue, crowd surges or stampedes near the stage, and injuries caused by intoxicated patrons the venue kept admitting or serving. The common thread is a venue that could have reduced the risk with reasonable security measures but did not.

What to do next

If you were injured at a New York concert, get medical care first and keep all records. Then preserve evidence: photos, video, your ticket, the names of witnesses, and any incident report. Ask the venue in writing to preserve its surveillance footage before it is erased. Avoid giving recorded statements to the venue’s insurer, and speak with a New York personal injury attorney who can investigate, identify every responsible party, and protect your deadlines.

Frequently asked questions

Can I sue a concert venue in New York if I was assaulted by another attendee?

Often yes. If the venue failed to provide reasonable security and the assault was foreseeable, you may have a negligent security claim against the venue, promoter, or security company. The venue is not automatically liable, but evidence of prior violence or inadequate staffing can support your case.

How long do I have to file a negligent security lawsuit in New York?

For most claims against a private venue, you have three years from the date of injury under CPLR §214. If the venue is owned by a government entity, you usually must file a Notice of Claim within 90 days under GML §50-e and sue within about a year and 90 days under GML §50-i. Wrongful death claims generally have a two-year deadline under EPTL §5-4.1. If you also want to pursue a direct assault and battery claim against the person who attacked you, that intentional tort claim carries a shorter one-year deadline under CPLR §215(3). Act early — venues overwrite security footage quickly and deadlines are strict.

What do I have to prove to win a concert negligent security case?

You generally must show the venue owed you a duty, that the criminal act was foreseeable, that the venue failed to take reasonable security measures, and that this failure was a cause of your injuries. Evidence of prior incidents and missing or inadequate security is central to proving foreseeability.

Is the security company liable, or only the venue?

Both can be liable. A private security or crowd-management company hired for the event can be sued for negligent performance, while the venue and promoter can be responsible for the overall security plan. Identifying every responsible party often increases the available insurance coverage.

How much is a concert negligent security claim worth?

There is no set amount, and no lawyer can guarantee a result. Value depends on factors like the severity and permanence of your injuries, medical costs, lost income, pain and suffering, how clearly the venue's failures caused the harm, and available insurance. Prior results do not guarantee future outcomes.

Laurence P. Banville

Reviewed by Laurence P. Banville, Esq.

Managing Partner, Banville Law · New York & D.C. Bars

Laurence Banville is a New York personal injury attorney and the Managing Partner of Banville Law. Born in County Wexford, Ireland, he earned his law degree summa cum laude from University College Dublin and once defended insurance companies in product-liability litigation — experience he now uses for injured New Yorkers. He has been named to the Irish Legal 100 and the Irish Echo’s Top 40 Under 40, and is an AVVO Rated attorney.

NY Bar D.C. Bar Irish Legal 100 AVVO Rated AAJ Member

Read Laurence’s full bio →

Free case review

Tell us what happened. We’ll tell you where you stand.

A free, no-pressure review with a New York attorney — in plain English. We’ll explain your options and the deadlines that matter.

  • Free & confidential — no obligation
  • A real answer about your NY claim, not a sales pitch
  • No fee unless we win your case

Prefer to talk now? (917) 551-6690

Laurence P. Banville, Esq., New York personal injury attorney
Laurence P. Banville, Esq. Managing Partner — he personally reviews every case review request.
CVA Form

FREE CONFIDENTIAL CONSULTATION

Banville Law partners with The Haggard Law Firm in Florida on these types of cases. Schedule a call with us and one of our firms will respond asap with you or your loved one's legal options as the victim of a crime.

Call now Free case review