Police drones, increasingly equipped with automated license plate reader (ALPR) technology from vendors like Flock Safety, represent a significant expansion of aerial surveillance. This combination allows law enforcement to track vehicle movements from the sky, creating vast datasets of location information that can be widely shared among agencies. The rapid adoption of this technology by police departments, often without meaningful public debate or oversight, poses a severe risk to individual privacy and due process. Without strong, community-imposed restrictions, drone-based ALPRs could lead to the pervasive and persistent tracking of ordinary people, chilling free association and creating detailed patterns of life profiles accessible to government agencies. This airborne surveillance infrastructure fundamentally alters the balance of power between the state and the individual, normalizing a level of monitoring previously associated only with authoritarian regimes.