If your HOA board is preparing to renew your Flock Safety contract, there is critical information you need before signing. In 2025, it became public that Flock Safety cameras were being used — through local police — to assist ICE in tracking vehicles for immigration enforcement. This guide explains exactly how it happened, what your board’s legal exposure is, and what questions to ask before renewing.
How Flock Safety Data Reached ICE
Flock Safety does not sell data directly to ICE. But that distinction matters less than it appears, because of how Flock’s national network operates.
Here is the documented mechanism that enabled ICE to access Flock data from community-installed cameras:
HOA or city installs Flock cameras
A neighborhood or municipality contracts with Flock for parking monitoring or community security.
Camera data enters Flock’s national network
By default — and sometimes without the community’s explicit knowledge — plate reads are shared with Flock’s national law enforcement database accessible to 3,000+ connected agencies.
Local police with Flock access run searches for ICE
ICE contacts a local police department. The officer runs a search in Flock with reasons listed as “ICE” or “immigration” in the audit log. The vehicle’s location history is returned. Approximately 4,000 such searches were documented.
The data reaches federal agents
Without a warrant. Without the HOA’s knowledge. Without Flock’s direct participation. Your community’s cameras tracked a vehicle for a deportation operation.
What Is Your HOA Board’s Legal Exposure?
This question is not yet fully settled in law, but here is what HOA boards should be aware of:
- State ALPR laws: Several states (California, New Hampshire, Maine) explicitly prohibit sharing license plate reader data with federal agencies. If your HOA’s Flock data entered the national network in these states, the HOA may have facilitated an illegal data transfer without knowing it.
- Fourth Amendment precedent: A judge in Norfolk, Virginia ruled in 2024 that collecting location data from ALPR cameras constitutes a search under the Fourth Amendment and cannot be used as evidence without a warrant. This ruling has implications for how broadly the data can be used.
- HOA fiduciary duty: Board members have a fiduciary duty to act in residents’ interests. If residents include immigrants or people with immigration concerns, and the board renewed a Flock contract after these revelations became public, they could face internal challenges or liability claims.
Questions to Ask Flock Safety Before Renewing
If your board decides to request written answers from Flock before renewing, demand responses to these specific questions:
- Is our community’s data currently part of the national law enforcement network? Can we opt out completely?
- How many searches of our community’s data have been run by external agencies in the past 12 months, and what reasons were listed?
- Has any federal agency — including CBP, ICE, HSI, or DHS — ever accessed our data directly or through a connected agency?
- What is our data retention policy after contract cancellation? When is data permanently deleted?
- Has the cybersecurity vulnerability in the Condor camera line been patched? Provide documentation.
Get all answers in writing. If Flock declines to answer or provides vague responses, treat that as material information for your renewal decision.
The PLACA.AI Difference: Independent from Law Enforcement
PLACA.AI was built for one purpose: private property security. There is no law enforcement network. There is no national data sharing. There is no “side door.”
| Issue | Flock Safety | PLACA.AI |
|---|---|---|
| Law enforcement network | 3,000+ connected agencies | None |
| ICE access documented | Yes — via local police | No — structurally impossible |
| National data sharing | Enabled by default | No national network |
| Federal agency contracts | CBP pilot confirmed | None, ever |
| Hardware ownership | Flock owns it | You own it outright |
| Price per camera/year | ~$2,500 | $899 one-time + $99/mo unlimited |
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Flock Safety share data with ICE directly?
Not directly. However, approximately 4,000 immigration-related searches were run through Flock by local police acting on behalf of ICE, documented by 404 Media in 2025. Flock also ran a pilot program with US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) before halting it. The national police network structure makes direct ICE involvement unnecessary — local police serve as the access point.
Can we turn off the Flock national network for our community?
Flock Safety offers an opt-out from the national sharing network, but community reports suggest it is not enabled by default and some communities discovered the network setting had been turned on without their authorization. Santa Cruz, CA reported exactly this problem. Verify your current settings in writing with Flock before assuming your data is not being shared.
Is there a Flock Safety alternative that is completely independent from law enforcement?
Yes. PLACA.AI offers solar-powered, 4G LTE license plate recognition cameras at $899 one-time with a $99/month cloud plan covering unlimited cameras. There is no law enforcement network, no national data sharing, and no federal agency connections of any kind. PLACA.AI explicitly prohibits immigration enforcement use.
LPR Security That Stays in Your Community
Same solar-powered, wire-free cameras as Flock Safety — without the police network, the ICE exposure, or the annual lock-in. Independent. Private. Yours.
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