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U.S. Cities Move To Restrict Flock ALPR Use

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Media Bias Meter
Sources: 4
Left 25%
Center 75%
Sources: 4

Shaker Heights rewrote its contract with Flock this month to require court-issued search warrants before any outside agency can obtain license-plate data, grant the city access to all Flock audit logs, and tie police searches to specific case numbers. Appleton announced last month it will disable and remove Flock cameras, and Cleveland's safety committee recently voted down a contract renewal. Shaker Heights Mayor David Weiss issued a statement committing to keep the tool available under tighter rules, while the grassroots group Shake Off Flock criticized the amended deal. Appleton Mayor Jake Woodford set disablement by the end of June and removal by the end of July if deadlines are unmet, and Cleveland's council president is seeking a rehearing with county officials present.

Prepared by Emily Rhodes and reviewed by editorial team.

Timeline of Events

  • Grassroots group obtains public records showing outside agencies accessed local ALPR data.
  • Shaker Heights amends its Flock contract to require warrants and audit access.
  • Cleveland safety committee votes down Flock contract renewal; council president seeks reconsideration.
  • Appleton mayor announces end of Flock use and committee examines broader ALPR ban.
  • Appleton committee recommends ending payments after fiscal year and sets camera removal deadlines.

Why This Matters to You

Your privacy is at stake. Flock's license-plate readers (ALPRs) collect data that can be accessed by outside agencies. Cities like Shaker Heights and Appleton are setting stricter rules or removing ALPRs altogether. Check your city's stance on ALPR use.

The Bottom Line

Cities are pushing back against potential privacy invasions by Flock's ALPRs. This is a win for privacy advocates, but the debate isn't over. Stay informed about your city's decisions. Worth forwarding if you value your privacy.

Media Bias
Articles Published:
4
Right Leaning:
0
Left Leaning:
1
Neutral:
3

Who Benefited

Law enforcement agencies retain investigative capabilities and access to ALPR data under revised contracts or transitional arrangements, which officials say supports solving serious crimes such as homicide, sexual assault, and aggravated robbery.

Who Impacted

Privacy advocates and residents face heightened concerns about location tracking and third-party data access after records showed outside agencies queried local data for immigration-related searches, prompting grassroots opposition and legal scrutiny.

Media Bias
Articles Published:
4
Right Leaning:
0
Left Leaning:
1
Neutral:
3
Distribution:
Left 25%, Center 75%, Right 0%
Who Benefited

Law enforcement agencies retain investigative capabilities and access to ALPR data under revised contracts or transitional arrangements, which officials say supports solving serious crimes such as homicide, sexual assault, and aggravated robbery.

Who Impacted

Privacy advocates and residents face heightened concerns about location tracking and third-party data access after records showed outside agencies queried local data for immigration-related searches, prompting grassroots opposition and legal scrutiny.

Coverage of Story:

From Left

Cleveland nearly killed its Flock camera contract -- now the council president wants a do-over

Cleveland
From Center

U.S. Cities Move To Restrict Flock ALPR Use

Axios https://www.wbay.com WFRV-TV Channel 5
From Right

No right-leaning sources found for this story.

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