Flock Surveillance Camera Vandalisms – Richmond Virginia

Flock February: Reportback!

You may have read our anonymous announcement and invitation last month to map and disable some of Richmond’s 97+ FLOCK surveillance cameras.

We’re thrilled to report that according to email submissions to rrn_submissions@tutamail.com and other observations, over a dozen of these eyesores have been disabled! That’s 10% of Richmond’s devices, costing FLOCK over $26k in damages.

Also! Looks like some good neighbors have been busy logging FLOCK device locations in the open source map at https://deflock.me/. They started the month with only 16 or so mapped, and now there are over 60 marked and ready for disabling. Great work Richmond!

We also read recently that Richmond is in a two year trial period for FLOCK services, at a cost to the public of almost $400k already.

We want that contract dropped!

If FLOCK devices are often down, hard to maintain, or destroyed, they won’t be able to justify renewing this trial period after two years, let alone track us and our friends around Richmond and between cities.

So let’s keep up the pace!

Thank you to those crews already working hard to fight the latest cop invasion into our daily lives. If you still haven’t gone out, here’s a refresh from our last post on how to take these black poles apart quickly and easily, without getting caught:

Have you seen those ugly black poles with small devices and panels on top?

Those are called FLOCK cameras, and they are popping up all around Richmond and all over the country. https://www.flocksafety.com/

These cameras are license plate readers, gunshot detectors, and cameras that are being deployed to “stop crime”- in reality, they amass a huge amount of data that any law enforcement agency in the country has access to effectively surveilling our every action.

HOW TO DISABLE THEM:

Many cameras are mounted on poles which have a convenient seam around 4 foot. The poles are connected by six screws. Once the screws are loosened, the upper part of the pole containing the camera can be lifted off. This is VERY lightweight. Once separated, you can spray paint the lens, smash it, cut it from the pole and toss it in a nearby bush or garbage can, or find another creative way to disable it! They likely have tracking devices built in so disabling them on site is best.

For loosening the bolts- you will want a TT27 bit (a TT25 bit will also work). This is a “security” torx bit, and can be found in major hardware stores for affixing to a screwdriver or a socket wrench.

Tin snips work great for cutting the device cables and metal straps connecting the device to the pole, once it’s down.

If you can’t find a bit, or just CANT WAIT to begin, using a set of pliers (like the kind youd find on a leatherman multi tool) works just fine.

If you’re REALLY in a pinch, we were able to loosen one with just our fingers, though we do not recommend this method.

So! Get a buddy (minimum one to address the device, and another to look out), mask up, leave your phones, wear gloves, and get to work!

Spread the word of your work- send info to rrn_submissions@tutamail.com
using a one time use email address like yopmail.com or tempmail.ninja

SPREAD WIDELY! TELL YOUR FRIENDS!

Keep your ears to the ground…

ASMR (Anti-Surveilance Measures: Richmond)

Source: Unravel

Four Construction Vehicles Burned at Data Center in Georgia

Anonymous Submission:

At the end of March, some entered the construction site of the data center hypercampus east of Atlanta, Georgia and burned 4 construction vehicles. This was done to oppose data centers that quickly exhaust the limited water supply of the region. This is another example of the country’s tendencies to externalize the costs of their relentless wealth hoarding to southeastern United States. They have chosen the south as an area of ​​sacifice, that is, a place to deposit the most unpleasant industries and their waste. For them, our home is barely available within such parameters, as it can still be used as a landfill. Thus, the people who acted insist that those who try to steal our water, air and land must at least endure loss and embarrassment on their way to hell.

This specific data center has aimed at facilitating AI connection for local companies. AI not only use more water than other computer processes, but is quickly becoming a way for the state to increase its intrusion in our personal life. And more and more are used by police and state forces to monitor those who oppose them. The people who burned these machines do not believe that our thoughts and movements should be used for profit or incarceration.

If you are interested in taking similar steps against such opponents, there are many opportunities. Atlanta Region is one of the locations with the highest activity of the data center developers, but they appear across the country. Companies owned by these centers often are not based in regions in which construction happens. No matter where you are, you are likely to be able to identify a project, facility or corporate office associated with data centers. There are many opportunities to take action. Some neighbors in Atlanta were successful with traditional organizing approaches. However, when politicians inevitably sell you out, we hope that this action reminds you of alternatives.

Here are some tips that may guide you to identify potential targets. Driving in search of construction sites can produce good results. Notifications of public hearings for rezoning and new constructions can also be helpful. Comparing the logos and the name of the corporation on signs outside the construction via Tor Browser on Tails will also help narrow it down. Check that your research is done safely on tails before acting; there are many methods and techniques that others have developed to limit the state’s ability to stop you.

Communique from some Texas State “Vandals”

An anonymous transmission

To our fellow San Martians,

We typically prefer that actions speak for themselves, but perhaps a few words are due. In the face of renewed genocide and mass deportations, all that is left is what must be done. Taking up the task of disruption, sabotage, and attack is not something we do lightly. The people of Gaza have repeatedly called for mass student escalation. We’ve witnessed targeted deportations of politicized students, workers, and teachers with legal status; a wave of student protests repressed and occupations torn down, and paltry concessions rescinded by university admin.

We ask: what did a protest of over 500 students last spring at the Stallions accomplish? We stood and chanted as fellow students at UT were teargassed. Last week, the Party for Socialism and Liberation hosted a small protest of barely a few dozen. Then everyone went home. Held on the square, this event made front cover of the University Star alongside an opinion piece by the Star’s editorial board advocating “proper avenues” of “political expression.” They even dared to invoke the expelled San Marcos 10 in an effort to downplay a little graffiti. Why? The university can better control every aspect of the narrative if we allow them to dictate proper political expression.

Our detractors have labeled us vandals, criminals, outside agitators, domestic terrorists, radicals/extremists. Though these titles are certainly an honor, we remain your humble neighbors, colleagues, & classmates. Living in the heart of US imperialism necessitates actions that disrupt business as usual. We do not fear political repression, but instead a return to normalcy.

Some students have bemoaned the defacing of their “beautiful” campus. Fuck you lol. This university is complicit in funding Israeli genocide and actively collaborating with ICE against the will of its student population. It was already an extension of an active warzone; our political act simply reminded people of that. It is students who make this campus beautiful, because it is our campus.

Others pointed out the inconvenienced sanitation workers forced to take such art down. For the first time, students recognized the existence and working conditions of underpaid, primarily immigrant workers who lack union representation on this campus. But rather than lay those concerns at the feet of a, frankly overpaid, administration whose campus is expanding unsustainably, these students prefer to weaponize said workers against a political movement. How often has the student body taken it upon themselves to guarantee the survival of these workers or their families?

UPD has claimed all its efforts are being concentrated on unveiling us while sexual harassment, assault, hazing, and homophobic and racist violence are still mainstays at this University. Perhaps it would be best if they concentrated on those, if they weren’t so often guilty of excesses of violence themselves.

Another point of interest was the overwhelming discussions held in the wake of our graffiti. Through Reddit, Instagram, and classrooms debates were held, photographs taken, interviews conducted, and statements released. The University Star would have you believe otherwise, that “many students have already ceased conversations surrounding it.” A boldface lie in an attempt to downplay an event the paper references in 3 different articles this week.

Our beloved University President, Kelly Damphouse, even took to the battlements of his own Instagram post responding to the flurry of negative comments he received from Texas State students, and liking messages such as “we stand with you Kelly.” Seems his public outreach coordinator needs to run some trainings with him, feeling the need to respond to each and every negative comment with hundreds of likes.

Funny thing that few people recall about Kelly: his doctorate is in counter-terrorism, counter-intelligence, and studying resistance movements. What that means, dear reader, is that the president of our university has a degree in stifling unrest. His position befits the degree as he has spoken wearily of anti-war student activists of the 60’s and compared them to today’s protests around Palestine. A fed for a president who needs to lay off the ‘gram lest he make a fool of himself. We are happy to report that the vast majority of student body responses on social media that we witnessed were positive 🙂

Finally, we come to the particular questions and answered that spurred this communique. Why did we do it? Should you do it? How? Was it easy?

We did it because it was a step, a small one, towards escalation. Graffiti carries a certain transgressive and sensationalist appeal that gets people talking. However, this was by no means a performative action designed only to create commotion. IT is part of a sustained national attempt to attack institutions responsible and hold them accountable. In the spirit of the Merrimack 4, we think it important to bring the war home. As parades, marches, protests, and community events have their place in revolutionary change, so too does direct action, disruption, and clandestine activity.

With minimal planning, some spray paint, and committed friends we reveal ways to strike back. It was easy. “stay tuned” and “you can do it too” were not just slogans but calls to action. Be bold. Be creative. Have fun, because it is fun to revolt. It’s the University’s responsibility to divest from genocide and keep ICE out. We can bleed their pockets. Material damages is money they cannot spend elsewhere. We take risks because we can, and once you realize it’s possible so can you.

Source: Austin Autonomedia

Fuck Flock February: Anti surveillance campaign announced in so called Richmond Virginia

February 2025

Have you seen those ugly black poles with small devices and panels on top?

Those are called FLOCK cameras, and they are popping up all around Richmond and all over the country. https://www.flocksafety.com/

Oh, also, they cost the cops over $2k per device…

These cameras are license plate readers, gunshot detectors, and cameras that are being deployed to “stop crime”- in reality, they amass a huge amount of data that any law enforcement agency in the country has access to effectively surveilling our every action.

We don’t fuck with that!

Richmond has 97 of these. Three flock cameras have already been disabled and we hope you will join the festivities by ridding our city of these dystopian devices.

HELP MAP THEM:
See a flock, map a flock! If arent able or willing to disable these devices, you can still be astronomically helpful by reporting their location on this user populated map! https://deflock.me/

 

HOW TO DISABLE THEM:

Many cameras are mounted on poles which have a convinent seam around 4 foot. The poles are connected by six screws. Once the screws are loosened, the upper part of the pole containing the camera can be lifted off. This is VERY lightweight. Once separated, you can spray paint the lens, smash it, or find another creative way to disable it! They likely have tracking devices built in so disabling them on site is best.

For loosening the bolts- you will want a TT27 bit (a TT25 bit will also work). This is a “security” torx bit, and can be found in major hardware stores for affixing to a screwdriver or a socket wrench. Maybe an electric screwdriver one would speed up your process!

If you can’t find a bit, or just CANT WAIT to begin, using a set of pliers (like the kind youd find on a leatherman multi tool) works just fine.

If you’re REALLY in a pinch, we were able to loosen one with just our fingers, though we do not recommend this method.

So! Get a buddy (minimum one to address the device, and another to look out), mask up, leave your phones, wear gloves, and get to work!

Spread the word of your work- send info to rrn_submissions@tutamail.com
using a one time use email address like yopmail.com or tempmail.ninja

SPREAD WIDELY! TELL YOUR FRIENDS!

We hope that the idea of a surveillance free city is music to your ears.

With love,
Anti Surveillance Measures: Richmond (ASMR)

Submission

Source: Unravel

City-Owned Bulldozer Burned in Honor of Cornelius Taylor – Atlanta, GA

In the early morning hours of january 30 some concerned citizens incinerated the bulldozer that the city of atlanta used to murder Cornelius Taylor while he slept. just as the IDF uses bulldozers to demolish refugee camps in Palestine, the city of atlanta uses bulldozers to flatten homeless encampments. they clear streets for parades honoring civil rights heroes while the poor freeze to death. the death of Cornelius Taylor was not a tragic accident but a continuation of the violent process of gentrification. we will not wait for the city to investigate itself and declare itself innocent of wrongdoing yet again while another person’s blood stains the ground. the city of atlanta does not care about human life but they do care about dollars. we destroyed their murder weapon on january 30 in direct retaliation against their cruelty, knowing they will only stop when their tools are broken. we call on other autonomous actors to join us in avenging Cornelius.

Submitted

Source: Unravel

Design Company for Cop City Charlotte Smashed and Gutted – Lexington, SC

January 6, 2025

On Monday morning, the employees of Boomerang Design, Lexington, South Carolina arrived to a day off work. The night before, shadowy figures broke the glass door, let themselves inside, and smashed computers, printers, phones, office equipment, audio mixers, and every floor to ceiling window.

Usually, Boomerang employees would start their days designing the US’s next Cop City; drawing up the ranges where cops are taught to shoot our friends, the rooms where they’re taught to raid our neighbors.

Instead, the employees of Boomerang Design were faced with the warning, painted on their last remaining window: “No Cop City CLT (Charlotte),” “Drop the Contract,” “1 Down, 3 To Go.” Boomerang has 4 offices:

(x) 1070 South Lake Drive Suite J, Lexington, SC 29073

( ) 1230 W Morehead Street Suite 214, Charlotte, NC 28208

( ) 6131 Falls of Neuse Rd, Ste 204, Raleigh, NC 27609

( ) 201 S Washington Street Suite 200, Shelby, NC 28150

Lexington is the first office to face accountability, it won’t be last.

Submission

Source: Unravel