Flock’s Story Doesn’t Add Up

From “Business Reform”

In this interview, I sit down in Dunwoody, Georgia with Jason Hunyar to discuss what he uncovered through open records requests about Flock Safety, local government oversight, and the expanding surveillance infrastructure in his community.

Jason explains what happened after he brought evidence to the Dunwoody City Council that Flock employees had accessed cameras in a private community center, including areas connected to a pool and gymnastics facility. We discuss Flock’s public response, the city’s inability to produce an agreement Flock referenced, and why this raises serious questions about transparency and accountability.

We also talk about Dunwoody’s security assessment process, alleged changes to the evaluation rubric, Flock’s “Safe City” strategy, federal funding questions, data ownership, AI training, derived data, third-party camera integrations, and the broader national security risks of building a massive privately operated surveillance network.

This conversation is not just about one city. It is about how surveillance technology can spread across the country before the public ever has a real debate about consent, oversight, privacy, cybersecurity, and the Fourth Amendment.