Five police cars pulled into the 600 Concord Road complex on a single morning in March, marking the start of a frantic two-month stretch for the Framingham District Court.

Between March 5 and May 8, 2026, public logs recorded 13 distinct police interactions at this municipal address, a volume that dwarfs typical security activity for a courthouse. The cluster includes five motor vehicle stops occurring on the same day, a well-being check, and multiple alarm activations.

The surge began on March 5, when officers executed five separate traffic stops at the property in rapid succession. Records suggest this was not a random occurrence but likely a coordinated enforcement effort targeting the immediate vicinity of the court. Two days later, the nature of the calls shifted to a welfare check, followed by a residential alarm report and an unspecified police incident on March 9.

While the building at 600 Concord Road (ZIP 01702) serves as a primary judicial hub, the filings note varying jurisdictional codes between 01701 and 01702, reflecting the complex entry points and jurisdictional lines around the facility. The frequency of these external interventions—13 reports in 64 days—stands in stark contrast to the quiet security logs usually associated with court operations. No arrests or specific charges are detailed in the initial summaries, leaving the outcomes of the stops and checks unrecorded in the public data.

Residents and daily commuters in the area may notice increased police presence near the courthouse as these matters are processed. The specific outcomes of the five March 5 stops and subsequent alarms remain pending in the public record.

For more details on these filings, visit the Framingham city portal.