DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

Flock is falling out of favor with police departments

July 14, 2026
in News
Flock is falling out of favor with police departments
Flock Camera
LAPD said it won’t renew the expired agreement with Flock Safety due to privacy and civil liberties concerns. Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Images
  • LAPD lets contract with Flock Safety expire over privacy and civil liberties concerns.
  • LAPD was a major Flock customer with 138 pole-mounted cameras across Los Angeles.
  • Flock’s license plate reading technology has made mistakes with serious consequences.

Flock Safety is hitting a rough patch with one of its biggest customers.

The Los Angeles Police Department let its deal with the surveillance company expire over the past weekend, a spokesperson of the department told Business Insider on Monday.

“We wanted to address some of the civil liberty and civil rights concerns and ensure that there is clarity over the terms regarding privacy, data ownership, and security,” the LAPD spokesperson said.

The LAPD is among Flock’s largest government customers. The Atlanta-based company operates a nationwide network of more than 80,000 cameras that scan license plates to help law enforcement agencies trace vehicles.

An LAPD audit report released earlier in July said the department had a three-year agreement with Flock, which operated 138 pole-mounted cameras across Los Angeles since July 2023. LAPD’s audit cited concerns that federal agencies could have access to data collected by Flock and that federal immigration enforcement could seek access to it.

The data-sharing arrangement was first reported in October 2025 by the University of Washington’s Center for Human Rights, which said that Flock had implemented an information-sharing pilot program that allowed federal agencies to access license plate data collected by local law enforcement agencies without those agencies’ knowledge or consent.

The LAPD isn’t alone in rethinking its association with Flock

A growing number of police jurisdictions have walked away from Flock since 2025, including Mountain View, Santa Cruz, Santa Clara County, South Pasadena, Flagstaff, and Hillsborough, North Carolina.

In some places, breaking up with Flock has proven harder than signing up. In Dayton, Ohio, city workers recently covered the company’s cameras with trash bags after an internal review found what officials described as “egregious violations” of city policy, including thousands of immigration-related searches. In Evanston, Illinois, officials said Flock reinstalled cameras after the city had moved to remove them, prompting a cease-and-desist letter before the devices were ultimately taken down months later.

Business Insider’s Nicole Einbinder previously reported that mistakes made by Flock’s automated license plate readers have led to innocent drivers being stopped at gunpoint, mauled by police dogs, or jailed after their vehicles were incorrectly flagged. One man in Toledo was arrested and suffered serious injuries after Flock’s camera misread the “7” on his plate for a “2” and flagged the vehicle to the police as stolen.

The setbacks come after years of rapid expansion for Flock, which has become a dominant player in the automated license plate reader market since its launch in 2017.

Earlier in 2026, Amazon’s Ring also canceled a planned partnership with Flock days after a Ring advertisement aired during the Super Bowl sparked widespread backlash.

In a separate incident, US Attorney Theodore S. Hertzberg announced federal charges against a Texas man on Monday for allegedly leaving antisemitic and homophobic threats in Flock’s company voicemail inbox. The voice message also accused the company of “breaking the Constitution.”

Flock Safety’s spokesperson told Business Insider that the company will have ongoing discussions with LAPD to address “misconceptions” that led to the “disappointing pause” and that it hopes to resume its “successful partnership” with LAPD soon.

“While this latest development comes as a surprise,” the Flock spokesperson said, “We remain committed to continuing our active and ongoing conversations with LAPD to find a path forward.”

Read the original article on Business Insider

The post Flock is falling out of favor with police departments appeared first on Business Insider.

ICE agents fatally shoot person in Maine
News

ICE agents fatally shoot person in Maine

by Raw Story
July 14, 2026

ICE agents fatally shot a person in Biddeford, Maine on Monday morning, with state and federal investigators arriving at the ...

Read more
News

Hunter Biden and Nick Fuentes nearly fight during an interview

July 14, 2026
News

Graham’s Death Complicates G.O.P. Agenda in Congress

July 14, 2026
News

Flock is falling out of favor with police departments

July 14, 2026
News

Trump’s niece sounds the alarm as his cognitive decline revealed by ‘unhinged’ war talk

July 14, 2026
Tension Emerges Among Democratic Socialists Over 2028 Endorsement

Tension Emerges Among Democratic Socialists Over 2028 Endorsement

July 14, 2026
Stephen Miller’s tribute to Lindsey Graham on Fox News immediately blows up in his face

Stephen Miller’s tribute to Lindsey Graham on Fox News immediately blows up in his face

July 14, 2026
America has issues — and Bill O’Reilly has ideas for how to fix them

America has issues — and Bill O’Reilly has ideas for how to fix them

July 13, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026