Yes.
Several South Dakota police departments, including Sioux Falls and Madison, are using Flock Safety automatic license plate readers for surveillance purposes with the goal of cutting back on crime.
In early 2025, the Sioux Falls City Council approved a $168,000 contract for the police department to purchase and implement software for 25 cameras. According to Flock and the Sioux Falls Police Department, those cameras are only used to detect license plates.
Police Chief Jon Thum said the cameras cannot be used for facial recognition, and a transparency portal on the Flock website says the cameras are not used for immigration enforcement.ย
But Flock cameras have been used in immigration enforcement in other places across the country. Santa Cruz, California, paused its use of data sharing after out-of-state agencies, including U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, accessed license plate data illegally.
The cameras have been used for immigration reasons in several other states, including Colorado and Virginia.
This fact brief responds to conversations such as this one.
Source
Sioux Falls Simplified, How police are using technology to solve crimes
Flock Safety Transparency, Sioux Falls Police Department
Flock Safety Transparency, Madison Police Department
Colorado Newsline, Frequent immigration-related searches of Denver Flock camera data revealed in logs
KSBW, Santa Cruz pauses FLOCK camera data sharing after illegal searches
VPM, The feds’ hidden immigration weapon: Virginia’s surveillance network
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This story was from South Dakota News Watch.