ICE accessed Flock cameras via local police — 4,000+ lookups, no contract Corona's $565K Flock expansion: no council vote, no legal review, signed same day Palantir CEO: our tech will reduce political power of Democratic voters Corona PD requested a new Flock sole source letter in January 2025 — for drones and Enhanced LPR 30+ cities have canceled Flock contracts — Corona hasn't "We never took this to council" — Corona city employee, July 2024, on Flock expansion ICE accessed Flock cameras via local police — 4,000+ lookups, no contract Corona's $565K Flock expansion: no council vote, no legal review, signed same day Palantir CEO: our tech will reduce political power of Democratic voters Corona PD requested a new Flock sole source letter in January 2025 — for drones and Enhanced LPR 30+ cities have canceled Flock contracts — Corona hasn't "We never took this to council" — Corona city employee, July 2024, on Flock expansion
Finding 01 — Critical Omission
The Contract Says Nothing About Deleting Your Data

The governing Professional Services Agreement — the document that legally controls the entire Flock program — contains zero language about retention periods, deletion schedules, or what happens to your data when the contract ends. The "30-day deletion" promise? That's Flock's own policy, in a subordinate document Flock controls.

Read Finding 01
Finding 08 — Council Bypass
No Council Vote. No Legal Review. Signed the Same Day.

The Third Amendment — bringing the total to $565,283 — was processed without a council vote and without city attorney review. A city employee wrote: "We never took this to council." Lt. Perez asked "Did Legal review this?" The answer: no. A $565K surveillance expansion signed the same day the question was asked.

Read Finding 08
Finding 09 — Expansion Underway
They're Already Using the Same Playbook to Expand Again

In January 2025, the city requested a new sole source letter from Flock — for "Enhanced LPR" at $15,000/year. Flock sent it within hours. Meanwhile Flock is pitching drones and a Real Time Crime Center to Corona PD. A new 5-year contract renewal is imminent. None of the accountability gaps have been addressed.

Read Finding 09
Corona, CA A Civic Accountability Coalition

Flock Cameras
Have No Place
in Our City.

Corona has deployed Flock Safety license plate readers at every city entry and exit — logging every resident's movements into a private corporate database. No community vote. No published policy. No oversight. And nationally, this same system has already been used to give ICE backdoor access to civilian data.

Why ALPRs Are the Wrong Tool
  • Mass scanning of every resident — no suspicion required
  • Private corporate database — no public records rights
  • Proven federal "side door" access — ICE, CBP, and others
  • Integration with Palantir, whose CEO openly pursues political power
  • Flock lied about federal contracts and secretly enabled national access
  • No retention limit, no sunset clause, no community vote
  • Chilling effect on free movement and assembly

01 — The Issue

What Flock Is Really Doing

Flock Safety markets itself as a crime-fighting tool. What it actually is: a private company building a permanent, city-wide record of every resident's daily movements — then monetizing access to that data.

Every Flock camera photographs passing vehicles and transmits plate numbers, timestamps, GPS locations, and travel directions to Flock's corporate cloud. That data is not stored by the Corona Police Department. It is stored by a private company, on private servers, under Flock's terms — not ours.

Residents have no rights under California public records law against a private company's database. The city handed Flock a surveillance monopoly on our streets and gave up control of what happens next.

The documented record shows exactly what happens next: federal agencies get access. Sanctuary protections get bypassed. And Flock's own CEO admitted the company enabled national federal access to cameras without the knowledge of the cities that paid for them.

This is not about fighting crime. A targeted warrant for a specific suspect's plate history is one thing. Photographing every vehicle entering and leaving Corona — every day, indefinitely — is a corporate surveillance operation. These are not the same.
01
You Drive Past a CameraEvery vehicle entering or leaving Corona is automatically captured, 24/7, at every major road in or out.
02
Data Goes to Flock's Private CloudYour plate, time, location, and direction go to a private company's servers — not a government database subject to public records law.
03
Anyone on the Network Can Query ItLocal officers can search — but so can out-of-state agencies, federal agencies, and anyone with access through Flock's "national network" feature.
04
Data Flows Into PalantirFlock integrates with Palantir's data fusion platform — connecting movement data to biometrics, financial records, and federal immigration systems.
05
You Have No RecourseNo public records rights against a private database. No published retention limit. No audit trail. No opt-out. No vote.
What Flock CollectsStatus
License plate numberAlways collected
Date & time of travelAlways collected
Camera GPS locationAlways collected
Direction of travelAlways collected
Data retention limitNot publicly disclosed
Federal access audit logsNot publicly disclosed
Who has queried Corona's dataNot publicly disclosed

Watch — Flock Safety Explained

"Every morning I drove my kids to school, our family was entered into a corporate database — not as suspects, just as residents going about their lives. There was no policy limiting what happens to that data, no oversight, and no way to opt out. That's when this coalition started." — Coalition Founder, Corona Resident · 20 Years IT Security Experience
Flock Investor & Integration Partner — Palantir Technologies
"This technology disrupts humanities-trained — largely Democratic — voters, and makes their economic power less. And increases the economic power of vocationally trained, working-class, often male voters." — Alex Karp, CEO of Palantir Technologies · CNBC, March 2026

Why This Matters for Corona

Palantir Technologies is both an investor in and a primary integration partner for Flock Safety. When you understand what Palantir is — and what its CEO openly admits it is trying to do — the stakes of these cameras in our city become much clearer.

Karp also acknowledged the technology is "dangerous societally" while arguing it must be built anyway. This is the worldview of the company holding a $30 million federal contract with ICE, embedded in the Pentagon, and designed to ingest Flock's license plate data from cities like ours.

These are not neutral tools. The infrastructure connecting Corona's streets to Palantir's data fusion platform is being built by people using it as a political instrument. Our city is funding it.

02 — The Infrastructure

The Surveillance Pipeline

Flock cameras are the data-collection layer of a broader surveillance infrastructure designed to feed into Palantir's analytics platform — which connects to federal law enforcement and immigration systems.

Palantir holds a $30 million contract with ICE to consolidate sensitive personal data — biometrics, geolocation, personal identifiers — for near real-time immigration enforcement. Flock is the front door to that system.

Flock also announced a partnership with Amazon Ring, allowing Flock clients to request doorbell camera footage from Ring users — extending the network into private residential spaces.

The question isn't whether this data could be misused. The record from San Francisco, Mountain View, and 22 states shows it already has been. The question is whether Corona wants to remain part of this infrastructure.

Where Your Data Goes

Your Car
Plate
Private Co.
Flock
Local Police
Corona PD
Data Fusion
Palantir
Federal
ICE / DHS
The Flock + Amazon Ring partnership means the network can pull private doorbell footage from homes across Corona — connecting public street surveillance directly to residential cameras.
03 — Documented Abuse

Already Happening in California

These aren't hypotheticals. Every case below is documented. If it happened in San Francisco and Mountain View, it can happen — or may already be happening — in Corona.

California — San Francisco

SFPD Database Searched for ICE Fugitives

Logs show at least 19 searches of the SFPD Flock database for ICE fugitives and detention cases — by out-of-state agencies — despite San Francisco's sanctuary city status.

Source: 404 Media / Public Records
California — Mountain View

Federal Access Enabled Without City Knowledge

Flock switched on its "national lookup" feature without the city's permission. The ATF and other federal agencies accessed Mountain View's camera data before anyone at the city knew.

Source: Mountain View PD Audit
National — 30+ Cities

Cities Are Canceling. Corona Hasn't.

At least 30 localities — including Santa Cruz, CA — have canceled Flock contracts citing unauthorized federal access and zero community oversight. Corona has taken no action.

Source: Published Reports, 2025
04 — Our Demands

What Corona Must Do

This coalition started when a parent — with 20 years of IT security experience — noticed Flock cameras lining the route from their home to their children's school. Every morning drop-off was logging their family into a corporate database run by a company with documented ties to federal immigration enforcement.

We are not asking for better policy around these cameras. We are asking for the cameras to come down. The documented record of Flock's behavior — lying about federal contracts, enabling unauthorized access, partnering with Palantir — shows this is not a company that can be trusted with the daily movements of Corona residents.

Short of full removal, the minimum acceptable steps are listed here. But our goal is clear: get Corona off the Flock network entirely.

Our Demands

  • Immediate cancellation of the Flock Safety contract
  • Full public audit of all queries against Corona's Flock database — including any federal access
  • Explicit ban on any ALPR system sharing data with private corporations or federal immigration agencies
  • City Council vote on any future surveillance technology before deployment
  • Public disclosure of existing data-sharing agreements between Corona PD and federal agencies
  • Community oversight committee with binding authority over surveillance decisions
  • Police Chief to appear before council and answer questions on Flock usage and access logs

05 — Take Action

How to Get Involved

This changes when enough residents show up — at meetings, at city hall, in public comment, and in conversation with their neighbors.

Action 01

Monthly Meetups

Join our growing coalition. We meet monthly to share updates, coordinate council appearances, and prepare records requests. No experience needed.

Action 02

Attend City Council

Public comment is the most direct path to elected officials. We go as a group with prepared talking points. The goal: make every council member unable to claim they weren't told.

Action 03

File Records Requests

California's Public Records Act lets us demand the Flock contract, federal access logs, and data-sharing agreements. We'll walk you through filing a CPRA request.

Action 04

Tell Your Neighbors

Most residents don't know these cameras exist — or that their data may already have been accessed by federal agencies. Share this page. Have the conversation.

06 — Connect

Get in Touch

Volunteer-run coalition of Corona residents. Whether you want to attend a meeting, file records requests, or just stay informed — we want to hear from you.

Why It Matters

By the numbers — what's at stake for Corona residents.

30+
Cities that canceled Flock
Localities across the US have ended their Flock contracts since 2025. Corona hasn't.
4,000+
ICE lookups via local police
Federal immigration agencies ran over 4,000 queries through local Flock networks — without a contract.
0
Council votes on the $565K expansion
The Third Amendment was processed without a council vote and without city attorney review. A city employee confirmed this in writing.