25 Flock Surveillance Cameras Destroyed in 5 States Since April

Key Takeaways

- At least 25 Flock cameras destroyed across California, Oregon, Virginia, Illinois, and Connecticut since April 2025
- A Virginia man faces 25 criminal charges for destroying 13 cameras, citing Fourth Amendment rights
- Flock Safety operates in approximately 6,000 US communities and is valued at $7.5 billion
People are taking down Flock Safety surveillance cameras across the United States. At least 25 cameras have been destroyed in five states since April 2025. The targets span California, Oregon, Virginia, Illinois, and Connecticut.
The destruction is not coordinated. There is no central group organizing it. People in blue states and red states, cities and suburbs, are independently deciding these cameras need to go.
Where Cameras Have Been Destroyed
The destruction spans the country. Here is what we know about each incident:
In La Mesa, California, two cameras were found destroyed on Fletcher Parkway in February 2026. One was smashed and left on the median. Another had key components removed. This happened weeks after the city council voted to keep the cameras despite overwhelming public opposition.
Six cameras were cut down from poles in Eugene and Springfield, Oregon in October 2025. At least one was spray-painted. Someone left a note: "Hahaha get wrecked ya surveilling fucks."
Suffolk, Virginia saw the most systematic destruction. Thirteen cameras were dismantled over six months between April and October 2025. Police eventually arrested a suspect. They tracked him using the surviving Flock cameras.
In Greenview, Illinois, two cameras were cut down in February 2026. The poles were severed at the base. Lisbon, Connecticut lost one camera the same month. Police are investigating.
The Virginia Man Facing 25 Charges
Jeffrey S. Sovern, 41, of Suffolk, Virginia, did not hide what he did. He set up a GoFundMe for his legal defense. He linked to deflock.org, an anti-surveillance activist site.
“I appreciate everyone's right to privacy, enshrined in the fourth amendment.”
— Jeffrey S. Sovern, in his public statement
Sovern also wrote: "I appreciate a quiet life and am not looking forward to this process, but I will take the silver lining that this can be a catalyst in a bigger movement to roll-back intrusive surveillance."
He faces 13 counts of destruction of property, six counts of petit larceny, and six counts of possession of burglary tools. The "burglary tools" were vice grips and metal cutters.
His method was clean. He would dismantle the mounting poles, remove the wiring, batteries, and solar panels. On Reddit, reaction to his arrest has been near-universal support. When your potential jury pool sees you as a folk hero, prosecutors have a problem.
Why People Are This Angry
Flock Safety operates in approximately 6,000 U.S. communities. The company deploys AI-powered cameras that scan every license plate that passes. Flock is now valued at $7.5 billion.
The company pitches its product as neighborhood safety technology. Critics see something different: a surveillance network that feeds into federal immigration enforcement.
Data shows more than 4,000 lookups by local and state police have been conducted through Flock's systems. The documented ICE connections have turned routine traffic monitoring into a flashpoint for immigration policy debates.
Cities have responded to the controversy by hiding camera locations. This has not calmed public opposition. If anything, the secrecy has fueled it.
The Pattern
Look at La Mesa. The city council voted to keep Flock cameras despite overwhelming public opposition at community meetings. Weeks later, cameras started coming down.
This is what happens when a $7.5 billion surveillance company expands faster than public consent allows. People show up to city council meetings. They voice opposition. When that opposition is ignored, some of them find other ways to be heard.
The destruction is happening in politically diverse places. California and Connecticut lean blue. Virginia and Illinois have mixed politics. Rural towns and suburbs are both affected. The anger is not partisan.
What Comes Next
Sovern's case will test how juries view surveillance resistance. If the Reddit sentiment reflects broader public opinion, prosecutors may struggle to secure convictions that stick.
Flock Safety has not publicly addressed the destruction pattern. The company continues expanding into new communities. More than 6,000 already have cameras installed.
The tension between surveillance technology expansion and public consent is not going away. Cities that dismiss community opposition may find themselves replacing cameras more often than they expected.
Logicity's Take
Frequently Asked Questions
How many Flock cameras have been destroyed?
At least 25 Flock Safety cameras have been destroyed across five U.S. states since April 2025. The affected states are California, Oregon, Virginia, Illinois, and Connecticut.
What charges does Jeffrey Sovern face for destroying Flock cameras?
Jeffrey Sovern faces 25 criminal charges: 13 counts of destruction of property, six counts of petit larceny, and six counts of possession of burglary tools for destroying 13 cameras in Suffolk, Virginia.
Why are people destroying Flock surveillance cameras?
Public anger centers on Flock's documented ICE connections and Fourth Amendment privacy concerns. The destruction often follows city council decisions to keep cameras despite public opposition.
How many communities use Flock Safety cameras?
Flock Safety operates in approximately 6,000 U.S. communities. The company is valued at $7.5 billion.
Are the Flock camera destructions coordinated?
No evidence suggests coordination. The destruction has happened independently across politically diverse areas, including blue states, red states, cities, and suburbs.
Another example of public backlash against technology adoption
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Source: Hacker News: Best / State of Surveillance
Huma Shazia
Senior AI & Tech Writer
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