Key Figures
| Documented ALPR cameras | 0 |
| Statewide rank by count | #88 of 92 counties |
| Cameras per 100,000 residents | 0.0 (#88 statewide; population 20,164) |
| Cameras per 1,000 square miles | 0 (#88 statewide; 384 sq mi) |
| Share of Indiana's documented network | 0.0% of 3,035 cameras |
Camera Locations
Which Agencies Use License Plate Readers Here
No Jay County agencies have been documented in the Atlas of Surveillance yet. Many agencies adopt Flock Safety and other ALPR systems without any public announcement — public records requests are often the only way residents find out.
How Jay County Compares
| County | Cameras | Per 100k residents |
|---|---|---|
| Marion County | 509 | 51.9 |
| Hamilton County | 213 | 56.1 |
| Lake County | 205 | 40.8 |
| Allen County | 117 | 29.3 |
| St. Joseph County | 111 | 40.5 |
| Jay County (#88) | 0 | 0.0 |
| Indiana statewide | 3,035 | — |
Counties ranked near Jay: Fountain County (0) · Franklin County (0) · Martin County (0) · Ohio County (0). See all 92 counties ranked or the full statewide and 50-state figures in our live datasets.
Share These Stats
Help your neighbors see what's been documented here. This shareable graphic is generated from Jay County's latest numbers — download it and post it anywhere.
Tip: download the image, then paste the caption into your post so the numbers and the link travel together.
What Flock Cameras and ALPRs Do
Automated license plate readers — best known through the vendor Flock Safety — photograph every passing vehicle, log its plate, location, and timestamp, and store that record in a searchable database. Indiana agencies that disclose figures on their own transparency portals report roughly 690 vehicles detected per camera per day, so even a small deployment builds a detailed history of where residents of Jay County drive, worship, seek medical care, and gather.
Indiana currently has no statewide law limiting how long this location data is kept, who can query it, or how searches are audited. Whatever practices Jay County agencies follow today are voluntary and can change at any time.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many Flock cameras are in Jay County, Indiana?
0 ALPR cameras have been documented in Jay County. This count updates automatically from OpenStreetMap, the crowdsourced dataset behind DeFlock.me, and the true number is likely higher.
Which police agencies use license plate readers in Jay County?
No agencies in Jay County have been documented in the Atlas of Surveillance yet, but crowdsourced mapping shows 0 cameras on the ground. Many agencies adopt ALPR technology without any public announcement.
Is there any law regulating ALPR cameras in Jay County?
No. Indiana has no statewide law governing automated license plate readers, so there are no required limits on how long Jay County agencies retain your location data, who can search it, or how it is audited. Eyes Off Indiana is petitioning the Indiana General Assembly to pass statewide safeguards — see our policy goals.
How can I oppose license plate surveillance in Jay County?
Sign the Eyes Off Indiana petition, then contact your state legislators. Statewide rules on retention, access, and oversight require action by the Indiana General Assembly, and legislators track how many constituents from each county reach out.
Data and Methods
Camera counts and locations are every OpenStreetMap node tagged
man_made=surveillance with surveillance:type=ALPR inside
Jay County, refreshed nightly at midnight (US Eastern) via the Overpass API and assigned to
the county with US Census boundary polygons; population and land area are US Census
Vintage 2024 figures; agency records are from the Atlas of Surveillance. Full
methodology — including how documented counts relate to installed counts, known biases,
statewide growth since 2022, and rankings for all 50 states — is in our
living statistical report, where every
dataset on this page can be downloaded as CSV or JSON.
Concerned about surveillance in Jay County?
Indiana has no statewide rules for license plate readers. Add your name and tell your legislators that Jay County residents want limits on retention, access, and oversight.