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Get Flock Out of Indiana

Tell ALPRs in your community to “Get the Flock Out!”

We the people can put a stop to unrestrained mass surveillance in our communities. Sign up today for our "Get the Flock Out" local advocacy series, and we'll send you exclusive social media content and step-by-step instructions for taking action in your community.

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Last updated on July 02, 2026

Flock Safety and other ALPR companies are turning Indiana communities into surveillance networks, tracking where people drive without a warrant and with little transparency or oversight. Learn how these cameras threaten privacy, civil liberties, and public safety, and how Hoosiers can fight back.

Automatic license plate reader (ALPR) companies like Flock Safety are quietly trying to build a nationwide mass surveillance system. If there are Flock cameras in your city, they are tracking, logging, and sharing your movements without a warrant. But we're not powerless. More and more communities are rejecting these creepy cameras — and yours can be one of them.

Flock's ALPR cameras aren't like your normal traffic cameras. This surveillance technology records and tracks every car that comes into view, and then an AI algorithm catalogs the make, model, color, license plate number, bumper stickers, and even scratches. This personal information is then uploaded into a nationwide database that any law enforcement agency with a Flock contract can search — with few regulations or oversight on how they use what they find.

What the Flock?

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Flock provides one of the most widely used ALPR systems, but they aren't the only company trying to make a buck by spying on us. Axon, Vigilant Solutions (a subsidiary of Motorola Solutions), Genetec, PlateSmart, Innova Systems, Rekor, ELSAG, Perceptics, and Jenoptik are a few of the other leading companies selling ALPRs to police, private companies, and others.

It doesn't matter which company has its creepy cameras in your neighborhood; they all have the same problems: a lack of transparency, oversight, and regulation into how they collect, store, and use our data, and how to hold public and private actors accountable if they abuse it.

Just think about how much someone could learn about your life if cameras constantly tracked where you drove. They could find out which doctors you visit, what house of faith you worship at, who you visit or drive around with — even which political meetings and protests you attend.

And we've already seen how this mass surveillance tool can be weaponized and abused by law enforcement. ICE and CBP have repeatedly used Flock to go after immigrants without warrants. Kansas police used them to pursue a man who wrote a critical op-ed about the department, while a Colorado police officer wrongfully accused a woman of theft based on a Flock hit and then refused to look at evidence proving her innocence. A mother and her children were held at gunpoint because ALPR cameras wrongly flagged their car as stolen.

Tell Flock Safety to Get the Flock Out!

This unprecedented spying is terrifying, but there's good news, too. Communities across the country are fighting back against these creepy cameras and winning.

Cities and police departments are canceling their contracts with Flock in response to public pressure. ACLU affiliates are supporting — and passing! — legislation in the states to regulate how ALPR cameras are used. But we need your help.

Read our local advocacy toolkit and join the movement to tell Flock and other ALPR companies: "Get The Flock Out!"