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Worried about surveillance, states enact privacy laws and restrict license plate readers

  • Recently, Democratic-led cities terminated contracts with Flock Safety last year, while at least five states blocked ICE access to driver's license records.
  • Privacy advocates note that ALPRs can store plate reads for years, raising long-term risks, while reports and audit logs show local officers conducted searches on behalf of ICE.
  • Flock Safety says its cameras run in more than 5,000 communities, connect to over 4,800 law enforcement agencies across 49 states, and log more than 20 billion plate reads monthly.
  • Last year, conservative-led states including Arkansas, Idaho and Montana passed laws limiting access to surveillance data, with Republican state Sen. Daniel Emrich framing Montana's warrant protections as defending Fourth Amendment rights.
  • Amid federal moves to centralize personal data, the Trump administration seeks to combine voter, license, and benefits records for deportation, while advocates warn this risks broader civil-rights erosion beyond immigrant communities.
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The TrentonianThe Trentonian
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Worried about surveillance, states enact privacy laws and restrict license plate readers

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Tulsa World broke the news in Tulsa, United States on Sunday, January 18, 2026.
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