Nine police responses and seven trespass tows hit the Eagle Rock Apartments on Dinsmore Avenue within a single 90-day window, turning a quiet residential stretch into a frequent scene for Framingham officers.

This cluster of incidents signals deepening friction at the complex, formerly known as Georgetown Apartment Homes and Bayberry Hill Estates, where disputes over parking and safety appear to be escalating beyond standard management resolution.

Public records show the majority of these calls concentrated between February and May 2026. The situation reached a peak on May 5, when police responded to a fire crew dispatch for an incident in the mail room at 50 Dinsmore Ave. Simultaneously, officers processed a trespass tow report and an alarm business call at 60 Dinsmore Ave, alongside a separate well-being check at the same address.

The data reveals a clear pattern: trespass tows dominate the response log. Previous reporting on nine tows in three months highlighted how parking disputes have strained the neighborhood, with the property serving as the primary focal point for these enforcement actions. The frequency of these calls suggests that administrative fixes have failed to de-escalate conflicts between tenants and ownership.

Residents on Dinsmore Avenue should monitor upcoming municipal board meetings for potential zoning or housing code hearings related to the property. Continued spikes in trespass tow reports may trigger further scrutiny from the city's code enforcement division if the pattern persists through the summer months.

This analysis is based on public municipal records. Visit the Framingham city portal for more details.