July 9, 2026
Flock Cameras and the Fourth Amendment Problem
By: ID Senator Tammy Nichols
Most Idahoans support law enforcement catching criminals, recovering stolen vehicles, and finding dangerous suspects. But public safety should never become an excuse for government surveillance of innocent citizens.
That is why people should be paying attention to Flock cameras and automatic license plate readers, known as ALPRs.
These cameras do more than take a picture of a license plate. They capture plate numbers, vehicle information, time, date, and location. That means a person’s movements can be searched later and pieced together into a pattern of life: where they worship, where they work, what doctor they visit, what political meeting they attend, and who they spend time with.
This is not a faraway issue. Right now, Caldwell, Nampa, and Meridian have ALPR/Flock-style cameras installed, and residents can verify locations through the public map at DeFlock.org, an open-source project mapping ALPR cameras across the country. Caldwell has installed a little over 40 cameras, and Meridian has been adding dozens of license plate reader cameras citywide.
The Fourth Amendment says the people have the right to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures. In plain English, government cannot just search you because it wants to. It generally needs probable cause, a warrant, and a specific reason.
That is where these camera networks violate the spirit, and potentially the protections, of the Fourth Amendment. One officer seeing your car drive down a public road is one thing. A government connected camera network quietly logging the movements of thousands of innocent people, storing that information, and allowing it to be searched later is something very different.
The U.S. Supreme Court’s recent ruling in Chatrie v. United States matters here. That case dealt with Google location history data, not Flock cameras. But the Court held that police conduct a Fourth Amendment search when they obtain a person’s digital location history through a geofence warrant. The Court recognized that people have a reasonable expectation of privacy in records of their physical movements.
That same principle should apply to mass license plate tracking. When government uses technology to build a searchable database of where citizens travel, it is not just watching the road. It is tracking the people.
Discussion and legislation ideas are now occurring to address this issue in Idaho. We should not wait for abuse before putting guardrails in place. These systems should require public notice, elected-body approval, strict data sharing limits, short retention periods, public audits, and warrant protections before historical movement data can be searched.
In places like Houston, Texas, people have already taken matters into their own hands. A few Flock license plate cameras were reportedly vandalized on July 4, including poles being cut and cameras painted over. Let me be clear: I am not suggesting anyone take that action. Destroying property is not the answer. But when government installs surveillance systems without enough transparency or accountability, people lose trust.
Other communities are already pushing back. Flagstaff, Arizona canceled its Flock contract and began removing the cameras. Cambridge, Massachusetts removed its cameras and terminated its contract. Austin, Texas ended its Flock contract after public concern over privacy and data sharing. Oshkosh, Wisconsin rescinded its approval less than 24 hours after serious concerns were raised. Idaho should pay attention before these systems become normalized here.
In Idaho, Wilder residents have already pushed back through a voter initiative aimed at banning Flock cameras in their city. DeFlock Idaho has also filed tort-claim notices against both Wilder and Caldwell over the use of these systems. While Idaho has passed some limits on automated license plate readers, these local fights show that many citizens believe the current protections do not go far enough.
That is why I encourage you to listen to this former police officer and whistleblower regarding these devices. This is not about being anti law enforcement. It is about being Pro Constitution.
Public safety matters. But freedom matters too.
In Liberty,
Sen. Tammy Nichols





















