In Burlingame, incidents often center around predictable “friction points” where foot traffic and vehicle access overlap—places where people enter, wait, and pass through before they feel safe.
Common scenarios we see include:
- Assaults around shared parking lots or garages (including inadequate lighting, unsecured access doors, broken gates, or cameras that don’t cover key paths)
- Attacks near building entrances where door controls fail, logs aren’t kept, or staff don’t follow threat-response procedures
- Harm during evening or event-related activity when visibility drops and the risk of confrontations increases
- Incidents at multi-unit properties where residents report repeated safety problems, but the security posture doesn’t improve
The legal issue usually isn’t “could a crime have happened?” It’s whether the risk was foreseeable and whether the property’s security was reasonable for that specific environment.


