Monday's downtown pulse—28 calls, Lettered Streets led the way
Happy Tuesday, Bellingham!
Yesterday unfolded as a steady Monday across Bellingham, with 28 incidents logged between midnight and late evening. The Lettered Streets corridor anchored the day's activity—ten calls clustered downtown—while the rest spread across a dozen neighborhoods from WWU to Birchwood. Malicious mischief and property matters dominated the ledger, punctuated by a handful of welfare checks and one retail theft arrest at Bellis Fair.
At a Glance
Three-quarters of yesterday's calls were non-violent—property recovery, fraud reports, trespass paperwork, and welfare transports. The violent incidents (seven total) included domestic disputes without physical contact, behavioral health crises, and one misdemeanor assault. Arrests were few but varied: a warrant pickup downtown, shoplifting at the mall, and a criminal traffic stop in Birchwood after 1 a.m.
Today's pattern will likely echo yesterday's midday downtown activity and afternoon Meridian calls, with retail corridors busiest between late morning and early afternoon. If you're heading into the Lettered Streets this evening, expect the usual post-work calm—last night stayed quiet after 7 p.m. Campus and behavioral health services should anticipate evening welfare checks, as WWU saw its second call near midnight.
Category Breakdown
Malicious mischief—trespass warnings, neighborhood disputes, and domestic disturbances without assault—claimed eight of yesterday's calls, reflecting the kind of boundary-setting work officers handle daily. Theft (five incidents, including fraud and a vehicle taken from King Mountain) and welfare checks (four, spanning behavioral health and courtesy transports) rounded out the core workload. One misdemeanor assault in Meridian and a single traffic arrest in Birchwood kept the violent tally low.
Downtown's ten Lettered Streets incidents leaned heavily on trespass enforcement and found-property paperwork—routine urban housekeeping between 7 a.m. and noon. Retail corridors saw fraud reports in Cordata and a shoplifting arrest at Bellis Fair around 11 a.m., while Meridian logged suspicious-circumstance calls in the late afternoon. WWU's two welfare incidents—a behavioral health response at 7 a.m. and a late-night crisis at 11:23 p.m.—bookended the campus day.
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Timeline Analysis
Yesterday's tempo built gradually through the morning, peaked in a midday cluster, then tapered into a quiet evening.
The busiest stretch ran from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., when seven calls landed—warrant arrests and trespass warnings downtown, plus theft incidents at Lakeway and Bellis Fair. A second four-call pulse hit between 2 and 4 p.m., driven by welfare checks and suspicious circumstances in Meridian and the Lettered Streets. After 7 p.m. the city quieted considerably: just three incidents between then and midnight, including found property in Barkley and a welfare check near WWU as the day closed.
Intel Briefs
Downtown Midday Window
Trespass enforcement and warrant work clustered between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. yesterday in the Lettered Streets. If you manage a downtown storefront, that's the window when officers are most visible for partnership calls.
Retail Shrink Timing
Both theft arrests yesterday—Lakeway at 1:56 p.m. and Bellis Fair at 11:18 a.m.—landed in the late-morning-to-early-afternoon band. Loss prevention teams should keep eyes sharp during that stretch today.
Evening Predictability
After 7 p.m. yesterday the city logged only three incidents, none violent. If you're planning errands or a walk tonight, the post-dinner hours have been reliably calm this week.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's in the "Other" category?
The "Other" category includes 9 incidents that don't fit into our main categories. Here's the breakdown:
Where does this data come from?
All incident data is sourced directly from the official Bellingham Police Department Daily Activity Log. We aggregate and analyze this public information to provide community insights. Our data is updated daily and reflects only what the department publicly reports.