Mugshot websites are some of the most predatory operations on the internet. They scrape booking photos from county jail and police department websites, republish them with your full name and arrest details, and then rank prominently in Google. Some of these sites then charge hundreds of dollars to "remove" the photo. We do not believe anyone should have to pay extortion money to protect their reputation, and we never recommend paying these sites. There is a better way.
How the Mugshot Site Model Works
The business model is simple and exploitative. Mugshot sites collect booking photos that are published as public records by law enforcement agencies. They repost these photos on their own websites, optimize the pages for Google, and wait. When the person in the photo inevitably discovers it and wants it removed, some sites charge "removal fees" ranging from $100 to $500 or more. Others have shifted their model after legal crackdowns but still operate in a gray area.
The fact that you were arrested does not mean you were guilty of anything. Many people whose mugshots end up on these sites were never convicted. Charges may have been dropped, cases dismissed, or the person may have completed a diversion program. None of that context appears on the mugshot site. Just your face, your name, and the arrest charge.
Do Not Pay the Removal Fee
We are firm on this. Paying a mugshot site to remove your photo rewards the predatory business model and does not actually solve the problem. Many sites that accept payment simply repost the photo on a different domain, or other mugshot sites pick it up and publish it themselves. You end up in an endless cycle of paying for removal.
How to Get Your Mugshot Removed
Step one: document every site that has your mugshot. Search your name in Google, and specifically check Google Images. Save the full URL of each page.
Step two: check your state's mugshot removal laws. Over 18 states have passed laws that either prohibit mugshot sites from charging removal fees or require them to remove photos within a set timeframe upon request. If your state has one of these laws, cite it in your removal request. This carries legal weight and most sites will comply rather than face litigation.
Step three: if your arrest did not lead to a conviction, pursue expungement through the court system. An expungement order gives you the strongest legal basis for demanding removal from any website. Many states allow expungement for dismissed charges, acquittals, and completed pretrial programs.
Step four: submit removal requests directly to each mugshot site. Reference your state's law if applicable, include your expungement order if you have one, and be direct about what you want removed. Do not pay any fees.
Step five: submit Google removal requests for any mugshot pages that still appear in search results after the source site has removed them. Google also has specific policies about removing certain types of personal information from search results that may apply to your situation.
Step six: address the court record databases that index the underlying case. Mugshot sites are only one part of the problem. Sites like CourtListener, Justia, Trellis, UniCourt, PacerMonitor, DocketBird, and Casemine may also have your case information. Our complete court record removal guide covers those platforms in detail.
Our Approach
We handle mugshot removals without paying extortion fees. We use a combination of legal frameworks, state laws, direct platform outreach, Google removal tools, and content suppression to clean up your search results. For arrest-related records beyond just the mugshot, see our guide on removing arrest records from Google.
If you have tried these steps and are still stuck, or if you just do not have the time, we can help. Book a consultation or book court record removal services and we will take it from here.
Related Resources
- Remove Arrest Records from Google
- Complete Court Record Removal Guide
- What to Do After Expungement
- Support for Justice-Impacted Individuals
The Broader Legal and Privacy Context
The mugshot industry didn't emerge in a vacuum. It's part of a wider pattern in which personal data, collected legally under public records laws, gets weaponized for profit. The Electronic Frontier Foundation has documented this problem directly, noting that mugshot sites function as a form of extortion and that state-level legislation, while helpful, remains inconsistent across jurisdictions. Their 2018 analysis at EFF.org remains one of the clearest explanations of why federal action has been slow and why individuals are often left managing this on their own.
The Federal Trade Commission has weighed in on the privacy side of this equation as well. Its business guidance on privacy and security underscores that commercial operators collecting and profiting from personal data carry real obligations, even when the underlying records are technically public. That framing matters when you're drafting a removal demand letter: you're not just asking nicely, you're putting a company on notice that its data practices are under scrutiny. Separately, Pew Research found in January 2019 that 79 percent of Americans feel they have very little control over data collected about them by companies, a number that almost certainly skews higher for people who've discovered their own booking photo on the first page of Google results. That survey, available at Pew Research, helps explain why mugshot removal requests feel so urgent to the people making them.
There's also a criminal justice dimension worth understanding. The Brennan Center for Justice has published extensive research on how arrest records, independent of any conviction, create lasting barriers to employment, housing, and professional licensing. Mugshot sites amplify exactly this dynamic by stripping away any context and presenting an arrest charge as a permanent public identifier. For practitioners navigating the policy and compliance side of personal data removal, the International Association of Privacy Professionals maintains current resources on state-level privacy frameworks that directly affect how removal requests can be structured and enforced.
What This Looks Like in Practice
A licensed electrician in Charlotte, North Carolina contacted us after a client found his booking photo from a 2019 disorderly conduct arrest on the second page of Google results. The charge had been dismissed within 60 days of the arrest, but two mugshot sites were still ranking his full name alongside the original charge. North Carolina's mugshot removal statute applied directly. We submitted documented removal requests to both sites citing the relevant statute and his dismissal paperwork. Both sites removed the photos within 14 days. We followed up with Google de-indexing requests, and the pages dropped from search results within 10 days after that. His Google profile now shows his business reviews and LinkedIn page in the top five results.
A early-stage SaaS founder in Denver, Colorado discovered her 2017 arrest photo, from a case that resulted in a completed deferred sentencing program, appearing on three different mugshot domains operated by what appeared to be the same network. Colorado had passed relevant legislation, but one of the three domains was registered offshore and initially ignored the removal request. We escalated by filing a complaint with the Colorado Attorney General's office and simultaneously submitting Google removal requests under Google's personal information policies, which cover certain sensitive records. Google de-indexed two of the three pages before the offshore domain even responded. The third domain removed the page within 30 days following the AG complaint. Six months later, a search of her name returns her company's product page, a 2024 Denver Business Journal feature, and her conference speaker profile.
By the Numbers
The scale of the mugshot problem is not anecdotal. A 2019 Pew Research Center survey found that 79 percent of Americans are concerned about how companies use their data, and 70 percent believe their personal information is less secure than it was five years prior. Mugshot sites are a direct expression of that insecurity. They take data published by a government agency for a narrow legal purpose and turn it into a permanent, searchable commercial product, without the subject's consent and with no mechanism for correction when the underlying facts change.
The Brennan Center for Justice has tracked how criminal records create lasting economic damage. Research available through the Brennan Center's research reports shows that people with arrest records, even those that never resulted in a conviction, earn roughly 16 percent less annually than peers without records. That wage gap starts from the moment an employer or landlord searches a name online and finds a mugshot, before any background check is even run. In 2022, an estimated 70 million Americans had some form of criminal record, meaning the population exposed to this problem is not a small niche.
On the legal infrastructure side, the Electronic Privacy Information Center has documented that fewer than half of U.S. states had complete mugshot removal statutes as of 2023. That means for a substantial portion of the country, there's no direct legal lever to pull when a site refuses to comply. The gap between states that have acted and states that haven't creates an arbitrage that mugshot operators exploit deliberately, hosting operations or incorporating in permissive jurisdictions. This is precisely why a multi-track approach, combining direct platform requests, Google removal tools, expungement orders, and in some cases suppression through positive content, tends to outperform any single tactic.
We've also seen this reflected in how Google itself handles removal requests. Google's own Search Central documentation distinguishes between removing a URL from the index and removing cached content, and the two processes move on different timelines. A URL removal request through Search Console can surface within 24 hours, but if the source page remains live, that removal expires after roughly 180 days and the URL can return to results. That's why source-level removal always has to come first. Getting the mugshot site to delete or unpublish the page is the foundation. Google cleanup is the finishing step, not the fix itself.
Another Client Situation
A licensed practical nurse in Albuquerque, New Mexico contacted us in early 2024 after discovering that a 2019 arrest, a charge that had been dismissed within 60 days, was surfacing as the second result when her name was searched on Google. The result was a page on a mugshot aggregator that had scraped the original booking photo from the Bernalillo County Sheriff's public records portal. She had already contacted the site directly twice with no response. New Mexico does not have a dedicated mugshot removal statute, which meant there was no state-law demand letter with immediate legal teeth. We filed a Google removal request on the basis of the dismissed charge documentation, submitted a direct legal demand to the site's registered agent citing New Mexico expungement-adjacent case law, and built out two authoritative professional profiles on platforms that rank well for her name. Within 11 weeks, the mugshot page had dropped entirely from the first page of results and the professional profiles occupied three of the top five positions. Her nursing license renewal, which was coming up that fall, proceeded without issue.