In a tourist-and-entertainment environment like Asbury Park, incidents often occur in places and moments where security planning can’t be treated like an afterthought. Common situations we see include:
- Bar/venue or event-related assaults near entrances, queues, or nearby walkways.
- Parking lot and garage injuries where lighting, access controls, or supervision were inadequate.
- Boardwalk-adjacent property incidents (including hotels, motels, and retail corridors) where doors, gates, or interior access points weren’t reasonably secured.
- Stalking or targeted threats tied to how a property responded (or failed to respond) to warnings and prior reports.
- Multi-unit building harm where door locks, hallway lighting, camera coverage, or visitor access controls didn’t match the property’s risk level.
These cases usually come down to a narrow question: was the security plan reasonable for the reality of that location and time of day? In Asbury Park, that “reality” often includes pedestrian traffic, late-night activity, and predictable surges of visitors.


