
Join our team of dedicated and active volunteers supporting Community Control Over Police Surveillance (CCOPS), an ordinance that strengthens transparency and accountability by ensuring that our communities have a voice in if and how surveillance tools are deployed.
Last updated on April 28, 2026
Protect Our Privacy: Community Control Over Police Surveillance in Atlanta calls for increased transparency, oversight, and accountability around law enforcement’s purchase and use of surveillance technologies.
Atlanta is the most-surveilled city in the U.S. and one of the most surveilled cities in the world. Various surveillance technologies constantly collect vast amounts of information about where we go, who we see, and what we do, even though the majority of us have done nothing wrong.
Learn more about the surveillance technologies that are routinely deployed by law enforcement.
Why Oversight is Urgent in Atlanta
Once collected, data captured by surveillance technologies often spreads far beyond its original source and purpose. Without strong safeguards, data can be discreetly shared with other jurisdictions or federal agencies like ICE without public knowledge or consent, where it can be used to target protestors, immigrants, LGBTQ+ people, people seeking reproductive care, and other vulnerable communities. These risks aren’t hypothetical.
In an opinion piece published in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, the ACLU of Georgia examined how deeply surveillance has expanded across the city and what it means for our rights. The piece, “Atlanta surveillance is more vast than you think. Time for stronger oversight,” focuses on how surveillance affects immigrant communities and people exercising their First Amendment rights.
Here are other examples of real cases across the country and in Atlanta:
That’s why the ACLU of Georgia is advocating for a “Community Control Over Police Surveillance” (CCOPS) ordinance in Atlanta, which would follow the national gold standard giving residents and local elected officials a say in whether, and how, surveillance tech is used in their communities. These ordinances have already been adopted in 26 cities across the country, where they serve to protect and empower nearly 18 million people.
CCOPS laws have been adopted in 26 jurisdictions from coast to coast.
Join our team of dedicated and active volunteers supporting Community Control Over Police Surveillance (CCOPS), an ordinance that strengthens transparency and accountability by ensuring that our communities have a voice in if and how surveillance tools are deployed.
The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution protects against “unreasonable searches and seizures.” As surveillance technologies become more widespread, so do the risks of intrusive, overbroad, and unchecked monitoring of our most private spaces and personal activities. Communities need safeguards against surveillance that threaten privacy and the right to live free of targeting and discrimination.
We asked the 2025 candidates for Atlanta City Council: If elected, will you require public oversight and transparency, before police can acquire or use surveillance technologies?
See how your council member responded.
*Note: Responses are included only for members who provided an answer to the ACLU of Georgia’s CCOPS support question.