ALPR Cameras
Although currently paused, our Police Department has the ability to use ALPR (Automated License Plate Readers) technology to capture objective evidence without compromising on individual privacy.
ALPR technology has proven to be valuable in solving and preventing serious crimes. Retroactive searches allow officers to solve crimes after they've occurred; additionally, real time alerting of "hotlist" vehicles allow officers to capture wanted criminals. Please see links to our policies and the transparency portal at right.
In Renton, Flock cameras are only allowed on state highways, and data from the system can only be accessed for serious crimes such as violentContinue reading
Although currently paused, our Police Department has the ability to use ALPR (Automated License Plate Readers) technology to capture objective evidence without compromising on individual privacy.
ALPR technology has proven to be valuable in solving and preventing serious crimes. Retroactive searches allow officers to solve crimes after they've occurred; additionally, real time alerting of "hotlist" vehicles allow officers to capture wanted criminals. Please see links to our policies and the transparency portal at right.
In Renton, Flock cameras are only allowed on state highways, and data from the system can only be accessed for serious crimes such as violent crimes, felonies, or gross misdemeanors.
What Flock ALPR Technology Does
Flock ALPR cameras are a public safety tool that has shown to be an important asset in solving several investigations in Renton. They capture a snapshot (not a video) of license plate information and vehicle characteristics as cars pass by the fixed camera locations. The system helps officers:
- Identify vehicles connected to felony or gross misdemeanor investigations
- Locate missing persons or endangered individuals when a vehicle is involved
- Respond more quickly to in-progress crimes
- Provide investigative leads in cases where no suspect information is available
- Corroborate timelines or vehicle movements in major incidents
What Flock ALPR Technology Cannot Do
The system cannot:
- Track people — it only captures vehicles and license plates
- Be used for minor offenses — Renton PD may only access data for felonies and gross misdemeanors
- Be used for immigration enforcement — SB 6002 prohibits sharing ALPR data with federal immigration agencies
- Be used by out-of-state agencies — information stored in our records is not available to out-of-state or federal agencies
- Provide real-time surveillance of individuals — it is not a live video system
- Be used arbitrarily — all users must be trained and authorized under the updated policy
There is also a common question about stolen vehicles. While the system can generate alerts for stolen plates, officers must meet the legal threshold for accessing historical data under the new law.
What the Renton Police Department Updated
To comply with SB 6002 and strengthen community trust, the department implemented several key changes:
- Revised ALPR policy to reflect all new state requirements
- Enhanced data governance to ensure proper retention and access controls
- Improved audit procedures for both internal and public-facing systems
- Restricted access to only trained and authorized personnel. All authorized users have been retrained to align with the updated policy
- Mandatory documentation for every search
- Reinforced accountability measures to ensure compliance and transparency
Data Deletion - Is the data truly deleted after 21 days?
Yes. The deletion is enforced by Amazon Web Services (AWS), not by Flock. Our LPR data is stored in AWS and automatically deleted at the end of our retention window (21 days, per Washington state requirement).
- The deletion is executed by an AWS S3 lifecycle rule that runs continuously, with no manual step that anyone at Flock can skip, pause, or override.
- Every deletion is logged in AWS CloudTrail with a tamper-proof, cryptographically validated timestamp, and AWS CloudWatch shows the corresponding drop in stored data in real time.
- Once data expires, it cannot be recovered by anyone — including AWS engineers — by design.
- The underlying AWS environment is independently audited against the leading security and compliance frameworks relevant to public-sector data.
Data Security - is the a federal "backdoor"?
No. There is no federal backdoor. There is no API, no standing access, and no mechanism by which a federal agency can reach into our data on its own.
Our data is encrypted in transit and at rest, hosted in a secure AWS environment aligned to the standards relevant to public-sector data, and every search of our data is logged, tied to a specific named user, and reviewable through the audit tools in our account.
Specific to Washington (SB 6002) specific changes were made in the Flock platform
- All Washington agencies were removed from the National (nationwide) Lookup network, and we blocked re-entry. Washington agencies cannot be added back, intentionally or by mistake.
- Sharing with federal agencies has been revoked and blocked for all Washington agencies in the platform. New federal sharing relationships cannot be created, and Washington agencies are not visible to federal users.
- Automatic search filters block any attempt to query Washington data for immigration- or reproductive-care-related reasons. Blocked searches return no data.
- Automatic private-to-law-enforcement camera sharing has been disconnected, consistent with the warrant requirement in the law.
These are enforced by the platform, not just by policy, to conform to state law. We retain 100% ownership and control of our data. In order for other (in-state) agencies to view our data, we need to opt them in.
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May 15, 2026
Share May 15, 2026 on Facebook Share May 15, 2026 on Twitter Share May 15, 2026 on Linkedin Email May 15, 2026 linkFrom Chief Schuldt:On May 4th, the Renton City Council voted 4-3 to pause the use of the Renton Police Department’s Automated License Plate Reader (ALPR) program.While I respect the Council’s authority and appreciate the public dialogue surrounding this issue, I do not agree with the reasoning behind the decision to suspend the program. The ALPR system has proven to be an extremely valuable investigative tool that assists law enforcement in solving serious crimes, such as recovering a family’s stolen vehicle, locating suspects, and identifying vehicles connected to violent criminal activity. These cameras are designed to provide investigators withContinue readingFrom Chief Schuldt:On May 4th, the Renton City Council voted 4-3 to pause the use of the Renton Police Department’s Automated License Plate Reader (ALPR) program.While I respect the Council’s authority and appreciate the public dialogue surrounding this issue, I do not agree with the reasoning behind the decision to suspend the program. The ALPR system has proven to be an extremely valuable investigative tool that assists law enforcement in solving serious crimes, such as recovering a family’s stolen vehicle, locating suspects, and identifying vehicles connected to violent criminal activity. These cameras are designed to provide investigators with objective leads in criminal investigations; they are not tools for mass surveillance or monitoring the daily lives of our residents.With the passage of SB 6002, the Washington Legislature recently adopted thoughtful restrictions and safeguards governing law enforcement use of ALPR technology specifically to protect the privacy and civil liberties of Washington residents. This was done after evaluating the performance, seeing unintended consequences, listening to community concerns, and understanding the importance of this investigative tool. Those laws established clear limitations on how this technology may be used, how it can be shared, how long data may be retained, and prohibited uses involving protected activities and sensitive locations. The law also dictates criminal penalties for those who violate it. We support those safeguards and have worked to ensure our policies and practices align with those legal requirements.The characterization of this technology as a broad surveillance system does not reflect either the program's intent or the operational reality of its use by our department. ALPR technology does not identify drivers or passengers, does not utilize facial recognition, and does not continuously track individuals. The system doesn’t identify who is behind the wheel; it only knows whether a vehicle is involved in an Amber Alert or has been entered as having been involved in a felony or gross misdemeanor. If there is no crime, the data is deleted after 21 days. Additionally, the data (which is a snapshot, not a video) is collected only from vehicles traveling in the public right-of-way, not in areas where it may infringe on an individual’s expectation of privacy.Our responsibility as a police department is to use lawful, effective tools that help keep our community safe while respecting constitutional rights and individual privacy. We believe this program, with State laws governing its use, and an objective policy in place, achieves that balance. The information stored in our records is not available to out-of-state or federal agencies, and it cannot be used for immigration purposes. Other Washington State agencies that have a similar ALPR system will have access to the network but, like our officers, must have a justifiable felony or gross misdemeanor investigation, an identifying source, and do so under their own credentials. State agencies without a system must submit a written request to search the Renton network, which must be approved by a supervisor. This ensures that we are following the requirements set forth by our legislators while helping to ensure the safety of our neighboring communities.I recognize and respect that members of our community hold differing opinions about the use of this technology, and those concerns deserve to be heard and discussed openly. We remain committed to transparency, accountability, and continued engagement with our residents and elected officials throughout these conversations. With any new technology, we need it to evolve with those expectations.I will continue to advocate for the responsible use of this tool because it makes our department more effective and efficient in providing services, solving crimes, enhancing safety for the Renton community, and bringing justice for victims.I encourage our public to share their perspective with our elected representatives (Council@rentonwa.gov). Community input is an important part of the decision-making process and ensures that your voice is heard.Public safety should never be compromised and remains our highest priority, and we will continue working every day to protect the people of Renton with professionalism, integrity, and respect.View the social post here.
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April 22, 2026
Share April 22, 2026 on Facebook Share April 22, 2026 on Twitter Share April 22, 2026 on Linkedin Email April 22, 2026 linkOn April 22 the Flock Automatic License Plate Readers were turned on. Chief Jon Schuldt paused the cameras on March 31 to ensure our policies complied with the new state law, SB 6002. We thoroughly evaluated the new law, updated our policies, strengthened data governance and retention protocols, and reinforced accountability measures to align with current legal and community expectations. All authorized users have also been trained in the new policy.“This technology plays a vital role in supporting our investigative process and assisting in getting positive outcomes for victims in our community,” said Chief Jon Schuldt. “It’s essential thatContinue readingOn April 22 the Flock Automatic License Plate Readers were turned on. Chief Jon Schuldt paused the cameras on March 31 to ensure our policies complied with the new state law, SB 6002. We thoroughly evaluated the new law, updated our policies, strengthened data governance and retention protocols, and reinforced accountability measures to align with current legal and community expectations. All authorized users have also been trained in the new policy.“This technology plays a vital role in supporting our investigative process and assisting in getting positive outcomes for victims in our community,” said Chief Jon Schuldt. “It’s essential that strict guardrails are in place to protect our community members. Our updated policy ensures the system is used responsibly, transparently, and within the confines of state law and best practices for public safety.”View the social post here.
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October 20, 2025
Share October 20, 2025 on Facebook Share October 20, 2025 on Twitter Share October 20, 2025 on Linkedin Email October 20, 2025 linkFrom Chief Schuldt: A recent University of Washington report found that some law enforcement agencies nationwide have utilized Flock camera systems for unauthorized searches, including immigration and ICE-related queries. These blanket searches spanned thousands of systems nationwide. Renton was not specifically targeted, but our system and other Washington agencies were included in the expansive searches.As soon as we learned about this, I immediately paused all external data sharing through our Flock system. Outside agencies must now submit specific, legitimate criminal law enforcement requests to access any data.There’s no indication that any Renton-specific data was misused—but even the possibilityContinue readingFrom Chief Schuldt: A recent University of Washington report found that some law enforcement agencies nationwide have utilized Flock camera systems for unauthorized searches, including immigration and ICE-related queries. These blanket searches spanned thousands of systems nationwide. Renton was not specifically targeted, but our system and other Washington agencies were included in the expansive searches.As soon as we learned about this, I immediately paused all external data sharing through our Flock system. Outside agencies must now submit specific, legitimate criminal law enforcement requests to access any data.There’s no indication that any Renton-specific data was misused—but even the possibility is unacceptable. We’re working with Flock to strengthen safeguards and ensure access is limited to lawful use only.Flock remains a valuable public safety tool; in utilizing it, we are equally committed to protecting your safety and your privacy.View the social post here.
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Deputy Chief
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Communications and Community Engagement Manager
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Videos
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Click here to play video
May 4, 2026 Council pauses Flock (1:52)
Council adopts motion to pause ALPR system.
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April 6, 2026 Council updated on Flock (47:29)
Committee of the Whole was updated by Police Chief Schuldt regarding the pause of system access until the department updated policies, practices, and systems to be in compliance with the new laws established by WA legislature.