Take Action

Tools

We don't run a camera map or a plate-lookup tool ourselves — these two projects already do that work well, independently of us. Here's what each one actually does, and what it can't tell you.

Tool 01

DeFlock.org — Find Cameras Near You

DeFlock is an independent, open-source, crowdsourced map of ALPR camera locations across the US, built on OpenStreetMap data. Anyone can report a camera they spot, and the map updates as new reports come in. It is not run by us, and it is not run by Flock.

100,000+

300,000+

100% Community

Open DeFlock.org ↗

The Map Isn't Just Growing — It's Shrinking In Places

At Least 23 Cities Have Rejected or Terminated Flock Since Feb 2025

Flagstaff, AZ killed a planned camera expansion outright. Cambridge, MA terminated its contract after Flock installed cameras the city had ordered removed. Eugene and Springfield, OR ended their programs the same evening. Every confirmed case, with its stated reason and source, is on our Resistance page →

Tool 02

HaveIBeenFlocked.com — Check Your Plate

HaveIBeenFlocked lets you search leaked and disclosed Flock audit logs to see whether your license plate shows up in a recorded search — including the reason an officer gave for searching it.

Important Limitation

This tool is not comprehensive. It can only show results from audit logs that have been leaked, disclosed via public records requests, or otherwise made public — not the full national database, which is private. A clean result does not mean your plate has never been searched; it means it doesn't appear in the logs that happen to be public right now.

Check Your Plate ↗
Tool 03

File a Records Request

Most of what's documented on this site started as a public records request. If your local police department uses Flock, you can request its search audit logs, its contract terms, and its data-sharing agreements directly.

File a request via MuckRock ↗