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Wildomar police present Flock ALPR data; council questions coverage and limits

Wildomar City Council · September 13, 2025
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Lieutenant Reese told the council Wildomar operates 22 Flock ALPR cameras and shared usage and capture statistics while noting limits in attributing crime reductions to the system. Council members pressed for local tracking and examples of cases aided by the cameras.

Lieutenant Reese, the Riverside County Sheriff's Department analyst assigned to the station serving Wildomar, told the city council the city operates 22 Flock automated license-plate–reader (ALPR) cameras placed at high-traffic locations and that the system retains 30 days of footage.

"The city of Wildomar has 22 cameras placed at high traffic volume locations," Lieutenant Reese said, and he explained that the vendor-provided statistics cover many county cameras, so local comparisons require cross-referencing the sheriff's databases. He cited a one-month capture of 1,833,449 unique plate reads across the station's cameras from Aug. 4–31 and noted that…

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