Sammamish is a suburban community with a lot of residential property, commuter traffic, and neighborhood businesses. That mix shapes the kinds of security failures that show up in real cases.
Common scenarios include:
- Apartments and multi-unit communities: broken or outdated access controls, inadequate exterior lighting, poorly maintained entry points, and camera blind spots around parking and walkways.
- Retail and service properties near commuting routes: incidents in poorly monitored parking areas, loading zones, or entrances where staff are present but response procedures weren’t adequate.
- Businesses with evening foot traffic: assaults or threats that occur when staffing is thin, policies aren’t followed, or reported safety concerns weren’t escalated.
- Construction-adjacent or contractor activity areas: when a site is active, security boundaries and monitoring may be inconsistent—creating opportunities for theft-related violence.
The key is not whether crime is “possible.” The key is whether the property’s security measures matched what the owner knew—or should have known—about the risk.


