By Ronald Dwyer
Across America, a new form of surveillance is quietly expanding on city streets, highway overpasses, and neighborhood entrances. Mounted high above roadways, automated license plate reader cameras—many operated through the rapidly growing company Flock Safety—record the movements of millions of drivers every day.
Supporters call them crime-fighting tools.
Critics call them digital checkpoints.
As communities from Virginia to California grapple with the growing reach of automated license plate readers (ALPRs), a fundamental question is emerging: How much surveillance should law-abiding Americans be forced to accept in exchange for promises of public safety?
Every Drive Creates a Digital Record
Modern ALPR systems do far more than simply photograph license plates.
Advanced camera systems can capture vehicle make, model, color, decals, bumper stickers, roof racks, and other identifying characteristics. The information is then stored in searchable databases that can be accessed by law enforcement agencies.
In Richmond, Virginia, critics argue that residents are being tracked whenever they drive through the city. Their movements can be logged, stored, searched, and potentially shared across jurisdictions without the driver ever being suspected of committing a crime.
For many civil liberties advocates, that raises troubling constitutional questions.
The Fourth Amendment was written specifically to protect citizens from unreasonable government searches and broad surveillance programs. While courts have historically ruled that vehicles traveling on public roads have a reduced expectation of privacy, critics argue that modern technology has transformed occasional observation into something entirely different: mass collection of movement data.
The Potential for Abuse
Privacy advocates point to documented cases where surveillance databases have allegedly been misused.
Across the country, reports have surfaced of law enforcement personnel accessing license plate databases for personal reasons, including tracking former romantic partners. Some privacy advocates have described the systems as creating a "stalker-friendly" environment when proper safeguards are absent.
The technology is not infallible, either.
Several high-profile incidents have involved mistaken vehicle identifications that led to innocent motorists being stopped by police. In one widely reported case in Colorado, an entire family was held at gunpoint after officers relied on faulty information suggesting their vehicle had been stolen.
When technology errors are combined with aggressive policing tactics, critics warn the consequences can become dangerous very quickly.
From Crime Prevention to Political Monitoring
Perhaps the most controversial criticism is the possibility that surveillance systems can be repurposed far beyond their original mission.
What begins as a tool to investigate car thefts and violent crimes can eventually be used to monitor protests, political gatherings, immigration investigations, or other activities unrelated to public safety emergencies.
Civil liberties organizations have repeatedly warned that once a surveillance infrastructure exists, pressure inevitably grows to expand its use.
History offers countless examples of government programs initially justified by security concerns later being applied in broader ways than originally promised.
For opponents of Flock Safety's growing camera network, that pattern is deeply concerning.
Surveillance Falls Unevenly
Researchers examining camera placement have found another troubling trend.
Studies conducted in Virginia suggest that ALPR cameras are often concentrated in lower-income communities and neighborhoods with higher percentages of minority residents.
Critics argue this creates a self-reinforcing cycle.
More cameras generate more police interactions. More interactions generate more data. That additional data is then cited as justification for deploying even more surveillance resources to the same communities.
The result, opponents say, is a technological version of over-policing that disproportionately impacts residents who are already subject to heightened scrutiny.
Big Business in Big Surveillance
Flock Safety has become one of the fastest-growing surveillance technology companies in America.
The company was reportedly valued at approximately $7.5 billion in 2025, reflecting the enormous demand from cities and police departments seeking technological solutions to crime.
But critics argue that an uncomfortable conflict exists when private corporations profit from collecting and storing information about the daily movements of ordinary Americans.
Unlike public agencies, private companies are often shielded from many transparency requirements. Citizens frequently struggle to determine how long data is stored, who can access it, how often searches occur, and whether the systems are producing false positives.
Civil liberties advocates contend that if governments are going to collect information on millions of innocent people, complete transparency should be mandatory.
The Illusion of Safeguards
Supporters often point to laws limiting data retention and restricting access as evidence that privacy concerns are overblown.
Yet critics note that rules are only effective if agencies consistently follow them.
Reports examining ALPR programs have revealed compliance problems, incomplete reporting, and instances where agencies granted broader access than lawmakers intended.
Even when local governments establish restrictions, federal agencies, court orders, subpoenas, and interstate information-sharing agreements can create pathways around those safeguards.
For opponents of mass surveillance, that means promises of strict oversight often provide little comfort.
A Defining Constitutional Question
The debate surrounding Flock Safety cameras ultimately reaches beyond technology.
At its core lies a simple but profound question:
Should the government be able to create a searchable record of where innocent Americans travel simply because technology now makes it possible?
Supporters argue that the cameras help solve crimes and recover stolen vehicles.
Opponents counter that freedom is not measured by how the government treats suspected criminals, but by how it treats ordinary citizens who have done nothing wrong.
As more communities install automated license plate readers, the nation may soon be forced to decide whether convenience and investigative efficiency justify the creation of a surveillance infrastructure unlike anything envisioned by the authors of the Constitution.
For a growing number of Americans, the answer is becoming increasingly clear: if freedom means anything, it must include the right to travel without being constantly watched.






