The Herald Sun

INVESTIGAT­ION

- Tyler Dukes: 919-696-1935

exceeds any of the company’s competitor­s, like Rekor and Motorola.

And because Flock doesn’t sell its cameras — it leases them — that can mean big money for the private company.

Contracts with several North Carolina clients show the cameras cost between $2,000 to $3,000 each annually. So a conservati­ve estimate is that North Carolina law enforcemen­t agencies are spending upwards of $1.49 million on the devices every year.

And it’s not just law enforcemen­t. Flock markets its cameras to companies and HOAS, which as we explored in our series sparked controvers­y in one Knightdale neighborho­od.

Flock CEO Garrett Langley has discussed that explosive growth nationally, telling an Atlanta podcast in 2023 that the company has gone from “single-digit millions to over a hundred-million in revenue in four years.”

ALPR CAMERAS DON’T HAVE THE SAME SAFEGUARDS

From the video camera inside Target to the doorbell camera on your neighbor’s front porch, Americans are already awash in surveillan­ce.

So what makes automated license plate readers from Flock or any other vendor different? Access, for one. With some exceptions, the vast majority of privately operated video surveillan­ce isn’t readily available for law enforcemen­t to search or review. Camera owners can turn it over on request, sure. But forcing the matter requires a warrant issued by the court, based on probable cause.

What if police wanted GPS location data tracked by your phone? That also requires a search warrant served on Google (at least it did before the company announced in late 2023 it would cut off access to such data).

Could detectives acquire your mobile device’s location via cell towers? Or attach a GPS device to your car? Both techniques require search warrants, the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled.

In North Carolina, state laws place protection­s on license plate data captured for certain non-law enforcemen­t purposes.

Toll cameras, for instance, capture and retain images of vehicles and license plates for 90 days to bill drivers. But the agency requires a subpoena to provide police with any of that footage, says N.C. Turnpike Authority spokespers­on Logen Hodges.

When police officers search for license plates or other vehicle data through an ALPR system like Flock, they don’t need a warrant — or any other external oversight. And although state law now makes misuse of ALPR devices a misdemeano­r, privacy advocates are concerned.

Flock and police department­s argue, however, that license plate readers capture informatio­n available in public spaces where there is no expectatio­n of privacy — the equivalent of an officer standing on a corner to jot down every plate number.

ACROSS NORTH CAROLINA, TRANSPAREN­CY ISN’T CONSISTENT

Much of The N&O’S reporting was built on the collection of thousands of data points from Flock Safety’s transparen­cy portals, websites that provide basic details on a department’s use of the cameras. That’s everything from how many cameras they have installed to the number of cars they’ve detected in the last month or so.

The portals are optional,

and not all of Flock’s clients have committed to using them.

Flock did provide a list of about 30 North Carolina agencies using the transparen­cy portals. That’s far short of the 80 or more agencies The N&O independen­tly counted that are using the service in the state so far.

A number of law enforcemen­t agencies told us through our survey that they have no plans to use the sites.

Case in point: police at Unc-chapel Hill. The university, which fought to keep its contracts with Flock Safety secret from the public before relenting earlier this year, “has not discussed the creation of a transparen­cy portal,” according to spokespers­on Kevin Best.

The N&O found more than 360 of the sites across the country. But it’s hard to know how many of the company’s 5,000-plus law enforcemen­t clients actually have the portals activated because the company hasn’t told us.

OVERSIGHT IN OTHER STATES EXCEEDS REGULATION HERE

North Carolina has a law on the books that

regulates the use of automated license plate readers.

The rules limit retention of license plate data to 90 days and prohibit its use for enforcing simple traffic violations. The law also requires agencies using these systems to have a written policy that addresses, among other things, training, oversight and “annual or more frequent auditing.”

But the regulation­s don’t require anyone to oversee whether agencies follow their own rules.

And North Carolina law enforcemen­t agencies aren’t always forthcomin­g about how they abide by those rules.

The Raleigh Police Department, for example, has provided no evidence that an annual audit of its ALPR system has been completed.

New Jersey, by contrast, issues a report publicly through its attorney general’s office on which law enforcemen­t agencies completed audits and which saw violations and complaints.

The limit on how long North Carolina agencies can keep data, meanwhile, pales in comparison to New Hampshire.

The Granite State — whose motto is “Live Free or Die — requires law enforcemen­t to purge license plate data after 3 minutes. New Hampshire is one of only three states where Flock does not operate.

WHAT’S NEXT FOR THESE CAMERAS ON STATE HIGHWAYS? UNCLEAR.

Over the last several years, lawmakers introduced bills to undo a decade-old legal interpreta­tion that prohibited automated license plate readers from state-maintained roads and highways. Those efforts failed repeatedly over objections by Republican legislator­s with privacy concerns about the technology.

In early 2023, a new version of the bill drew support from law enforcemen­t, including Raleigh Police Chief Estella Patterson and Nash County Sheriff Keith Stone, who testified to lawmakers that the devices were critical tools for fighting crime.

The legislatur­e approved the measure in October, allowing the devices on N.C. Department of Transporta­tion right-of-ways through a

pilot program run by DOT and the State Bureau of Investigat­ion. The SBI, either on its own or on behalf of a local law enforcemen­t agency, would need to enter into an agreement with NCDOT on where to place the devices.

That will likely mean more ALPR cameras along 80,000 miles of North Carolina streets. But when those new cameras will start appearing — that’s hard to say.

Despite the law going into effect in January, neither agency has not provided any detail on how they’ll implement it.

“Discussion­s and meetings continue” about the pilot project’s implementa­tion, SBI spokespers­on Angie Grube said in early April. After The N&O checked in last week, Grube said the agency had nothing to announce.

As of Thursday, NCDOT has yet to receive any requests to install the devices, according to spokespers­on Aaron Moody.

 ?? TRAVIS LONG tlong@newsobserv­er.com ?? Flock Safety automated license plate reader cameras monitor around 400,000 vehicles per month in Raleigh, according to the police department’s transparen­cy portal.
TRAVIS LONG tlong@newsobserv­er.com Flock Safety automated license plate reader cameras monitor around 400,000 vehicles per month in Raleigh, according to the police department’s transparen­cy portal.

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