San Antonio's public city parks see thousands of visitors every year, but specific parks also generate a substantial amount of police calls on a yearly basis.
According to the police calls made for 2013, each park has a crime that is predominant at that specific location.
KSAT crime analyst Eddie Gonzales said much of this is due to the geography, or layout of the park.
For example, Gonzales said scenic trails are what attract visitors to O.P. Schnabel, McAllister, Eisenhower and Friedrich parks, but it's those scenic trails away from the parking lots that make them targets for vehicle burglaries.
"There's a lot of room to just blend in, it doesn't look unusual to just walk around in the area," Gonzales said. "Eisenhower, Friedrich, those are target-rich environments for car burglars, for the mere fact that it's just an isolated area."
According to the police calls for 2013, more than half of all calls made from those four parks were for vehicle break-ins.
Other parks that are less isolated, such as Southside Lions and Brackenridge parks, see crimes such as drug, alcohol and curfew violations.
"Anytime you have a huge residential area, you're going to have more curfew violations because people are going to go there to drink," Gonzales said.
In addition, both Southside Lions and Brackenridge parks individually generated the most police calls for 2013.
As for sex crimes, Olmos Basin Park leads the way, with a higher ratio of sex-related crimes than any other park in the city.
Gonzales said the park has gained a reputation over the years for being a hotspot for these types of offenses.
"In my experience here in San Antonio, Olmos (Basin) Park has always had a number of sex-type related offenses, from indecent exposure, crimes of that nature," Gonzales said.
Calls to report sex crimes happened at an average of once a month at Olmos Basin Park, compared to other parks, most of which received no calls at all.
According to the call logs, graffiti was the most common crime committed at Medina River Park, and another popular park, Phil Hardberger, had a variety of different types of calls, but none standing out more than the others.