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AI Search · Arrest Records

Old Arrest Record Showing Up in AI Search Results

You got the news article de-indexed from Google. Then someone asked ChatGPT about you and the arrest came up anyway. This is the AI resurrection problem, and it is becoming one of the most common complaints in online reputation management. Here is how it happens, why each AI platform behaves differently, and how to systematically remove an arrest record from AI search results.

Read time: ~9 min Published: May 12, 2026 By: RemoveNews.ai
Key Takeaways

The Core Problem

Why AI Search Is a New Threat for People With Old Arrest Records

For years, the standard playbook for managing an old arrest record online focused on two things: getting the news article removed or de-indexed, and pushing it down in Google rankings with positive content. That strategy still works, but it no longer covers the full landscape.

AI search tools, including ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews, and Bing Copilot, do not operate like traditional search engines. Traditional search engines crawl the current web and serve links to content that exists right now. AI language models are trained on snapshots of the internet, often collected over years, then deployed and used for months or years afterward. This means the model's knowledge of you is frozen in time, at a point when your arrest record articles were still live, widely indexed, and prominently ranking.

The practical result: a person might successfully suppress an arrest article in Google's search results in 2024, only to find that ChatGPT, when asked about them by a hiring manager or business partner, produces a confident summary of the arrest from 2019. The article is no longer on page one of Google. But it lives on inside the model.

This phenomenon has been called the "AI resurrection problem" within the reputation management industry. Content that was effectively buried can reappear through AI-generated summaries, and because users often perceive AI responses as more authoritative than a list of links, the reputational damage can be significant.

Expert Insight

The scale of the training data problem is often underestimated. Major AI language models were trained on web crawls that go back to 2008 or earlier. That means an arrest article from 2010, 2014, or 2018 that has since been removed from the publisher's site or de-indexed from Google may still exist in the training corpus. The article's deletion from the live web does not retroactively remove it from a model that was trained before the deletion occurred. This is not a bug in these systems, but it is a serious privacy consequence that platforms are only beginning to address.

The risk is compounded by how people use AI tools. A hiring manager who types "tell me about [your name]" into ChatGPT is getting a synthesized answer with no source links to evaluate. There is no opportunity to assess whether the source is a decade-old local news brief or a major investigative piece. The AI presents information with equal confidence regardless of the origin or the current accuracy of the data.


Platform Breakdown

How ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews, and Bing Copilot Handle Arrest Records Differently

Not all AI platforms work the same way, and understanding the difference matters for your removal strategy. There are two fundamentally different architectures: models that primarily rely on static training data, and retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) systems that query the live web before generating a response.

ChatGPT (OpenAI)

ChatGPT's standard models are primarily trained on static datasets. When you query ChatGPT about a person, the response draws from the model's training data rather than conducting a live web search (unless you are using the Browse with Bing feature or GPT-4's web access tools). This means that even a fully removed article may inform the model's response if the article was part of the training corpus.

OpenAI provides a privacy request portal for individuals who want personal information removed from responses. The process involves submitting a request at privacy.openai.com, documenting the specific information that appears, and explaining why it should be removed. OpenAI reviews requests under its privacy policy, and where feasible, can retrain or fine-tune models to reduce the likelihood of surfacing specific information.

Perplexity AI

Perplexity operates primarily as a retrieval-augmented system, meaning it searches the live web, retrieves sources, and then synthesizes a response with citations. This is both better and worse news for people with old arrest records. Better, because if the original article is removed or de-indexed, Perplexity is less likely to find it. Worse, because Perplexity is very effective at finding content that Google has de-ranked but not de-indexed, including archived versions and cached pages.

Google AI Overviews

Google AI Overviews use Google's own search index as their data source, combined with Google's language models. This means that content de-indexed from Google is less likely to appear in AI Overviews, making Google de-indexing requests more effective for AI purposes than for other platforms. Google provides a de-indexing request process through its Search Console and its content removal request form, and a successful de-indexing typically cascades to AI Overviews relatively quickly.

Bing Copilot

Bing Copilot (formerly Bing Chat) uses a combination of Microsoft's language models and live Bing search results. Like Perplexity, it conducts real-time web retrieval before generating responses. Content de-indexed from Bing has a meaningful chance of not appearing in Copilot responses. Microsoft's content removal request process runs through Bing Webmaster Tools and its content removal request form.

Important Limitation

Even after a source article is de-indexed from both Google and Bing, it may still appear in AI responses for weeks or months because search engine index updates and AI model updates operate on different schedules. Do not assume that de-indexing equals immediate removal from all AI platforms. Submit direct privacy requests to each AI platform separately.

Have an arrest article surfacing in AI search results? Our team has developed a platform-by-platform removal strategy that addresses both the source content and the AI layer simultaneously.

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Comparison Data

AI Platform Removal Comparison

AI Platform Primary Data Source Removal Option Likelihood of Success Typical Timeline
ChatGPT (OpenAI) Static training data + optional web browsing OpenAI Privacy Portal (privacy.openai.com) Moderate 8 to 16 weeks
Perplexity AI Live web retrieval (RAG) Source de-indexing is primary lever; Perplexity content request form Higher if source removed 4 to 10 weeks post source removal
Google AI Overviews Google Search index Google de-indexing request; Google Privacy Removal Request Higher 4 to 8 weeks
Bing Copilot Live Bing search results + Microsoft LLM Bing content removal request; Microsoft Privacy Dashboard Moderate 6 to 12 weeks
Meta AI Static training data; Meta platform content Meta Privacy Center; Right to erasure request (for EU/UK users) Lower (limited non-EU process) 8 to 20 weeks

The Removal Process

Step-by-Step: Arrest Record AI Search Removal

Effective arrest record AI search removal requires working in a specific sequence. Skipping the source removal step and going directly to AI platform requests is a common and costly mistake. Here is the correct order of operations.

  1. 1
    Remove or de-index the source article first. Whether the arrest was covered by a local news site, a police blotter aggregator, or a regional paper, the article at its original URL must be addressed before AI platform requests will be effective. For guidance on this step, see our detailed guide on how to remove an old arrest article from Google. If the publisher will not remove the article, a de-indexing request to Google is the next best option.
  2. 2
    Request Google de-indexing through Search Console or Google's removal tool. Use Google's "Remove outdated content" tool for content that has been deleted from the source but is still cached. Use the privacy removal request form for personally sensitive content. A successful Google de-indexing request also cascades to Google AI Overviews. Document every submission with screenshots and confirmation emails.
  3. 3
    Submit to Bing's content removal request. Go to Bing Webmaster Tools and use the URL removal feature to request de-indexing. Also submit a separate privacy request through the Microsoft Privacy Dashboard if the content constitutes sensitive personal information. Bing de-indexing reduces Copilot's likelihood of surfacing the arrest.
  4. 4
    Submit a privacy request to OpenAI. Navigate to privacy.openai.com and select the option for removing your personal information from ChatGPT's training data or responses. Provide specific examples of the arrest record information that appears, the original source URL (even if now removed), and documentation of any expungement or case disposition. OpenAI's process is more effective when you can show that the information is no longer accurate or that its continued surfacing causes ongoing harm.
  5. 5
    Request removal from Perplexity. Perplexity provides a content removal request form. Since Perplexity is a retrieval-based system, de-indexing from Google and Bing is your strongest lever. However, submitting a direct request to Perplexity ensures that their team is aware of the issue and that any cached or pinned content is flagged for removal.
  6. 6
    Monitor and verify. After submitting all requests, wait four to six weeks and then systematically test each AI platform by querying your name. Use a private or incognito browser to avoid personalization. Document what each platform returns. If your arrest record still appears, follow up with each platform's privacy team and escalate where possible. This is an ongoing process, not a one-time submission.
From Our Team

We have processed hundreds of arrest record AI search removal requests since AI overview tools became mainstream. The single biggest factor in success is timing between the source removal and the AI platform request. Submitting to OpenAI or Microsoft before the source article is fully removed typically results in rejection, because reviewers find the article still accessible. Wait until you have written confirmation that the original article is down or de-indexed, then submit your AI platform requests within the same week.


Legal Landscape

State Expungement Laws and Their Effect on Online Content

Many people assume that receiving a court-ordered expungement means their arrest record automatically disappears from the internet, including from AI tools. This assumption is incorrect in nearly every U.S. jurisdiction, and understanding why matters for setting realistic expectations.

Expungement orders are directed at government agencies, not private publishers or technology companies. When a court grants expungement, it orders law enforcement agencies, courts, and certain government databases to seal or destroy the arrest record. It does not create a legal obligation for newspapers, AI platforms, or websites to remove their reporting about the arrest.

However, expungement documentation is extremely useful as leverage in removal requests. When you approach a publisher or an AI platform with documented proof that a court has ordered your arrest record sealed, you significantly strengthen your argument that the continued publication of the information is harmful, outdated, and no longer serves a legitimate public interest.

California: AB 1985 and the Right to Know

California's AB 1985, which took effect in 2023, expanded the state's existing data broker law to require data brokers to honor deletion requests for certain types of personal information. While the law does not directly cover news publishers or AI companies as currently defined, it reflects a broader legislative trend toward recognizing individuals' rights to control personal criminal history data in digital form. Advocates have argued that AI platforms that train on and reproduce arrest record data from California residents may eventually fall under this regulatory umbrella as the law evolves.

Other States With Relevant Laws

Colorado, Illinois, and several other states have enacted or are considering legislation that expands expungement protections or creates data deletion rights applicable to private entities. The Federal Clean Slate Act, introduced in Congress in multiple sessions, would automate federal expungement for certain offenses and could eventually create stronger grounds for online removal requests. For the most current state-by-state analysis, the Collateral Consequences Resource Center maintains updated research on expungement law developments.

Even without a specific statute compelling removal, expungement documentation combined with a well-reasoned editorial argument remains one of the most effective tools for negotiating article removal. Our guide on removing an old arrest article from Google covers how to frame this argument for different types of publishers.

Questions We Hear Most Often

Platform Policies

What AI Platforms Actually Process for Privacy Removal

Understanding what each AI company's privacy team actually reviews and acts on is essential for writing an effective removal request. Submitting a vague request citing "my privacy" is far less effective than a specific, documented request tied to each platform's stated policies.

OpenAI's Privacy Framework

OpenAI's privacy policy acknowledges the right to request deletion of personal information in jurisdictions where applicable, including California under CCPA and the EU under GDPR. Even if you are not in an explicitly covered jurisdiction, OpenAI's privacy team reviews requests on a case-by-case basis. The strongest requests are those that (a) identify specific outputs containing your arrest information, (b) demonstrate that the underlying source article has been removed or corrected, and (c) show that the information is sensitive personal data whose continued surfacing causes documented harm, such as employment consequences.

Google's Framework

Google provides a specific removal request pathway for content that involves personal information like criminal records. Under Google's policies, you can request de-indexing of content that includes your name in combination with arrest or booking record information, particularly where the arrest did not result in a conviction or where the content is outdated. Google evaluates these requests by balancing the individual's privacy interest against the public interest in the information. Arrest records that are old, resulted in dismissal, or involved minor offenses generally fare better in this analysis. See our companion guide on removing content from ChatGPT and AI search for more on the platform-specific process.

Microsoft's Framework

Microsoft's content removal process for Bing and Copilot focuses on content that violates its content policies or involves sensitive personal information. Arrest record data, particularly where the arrest did not result in conviction, can qualify. Microsoft's Privacy Dashboard at account.microsoft.com/privacy provides the starting point for personal data requests.

Ready to start the removal process? Our team handles the full sequence: source article, Google de-indexing, and AI platform requests across every major platform.

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Frequently Asked Questions

FAQ: Arrest Record AI Search Removal

Can AI tools like ChatGPT surface arrest records even if the article is gone from Google?
Yes. AI language models are trained on data collected before their cutoff date, meaning an article that was de-indexed from Google can still exist in an AI model's training data. ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Bing Copilot can all surface this information from their underlying data sources even if the original article no longer ranks in search. This is why a multi-platform removal strategy is essential.
Does expungement automatically remove my arrest record from AI search results?
No. Expungement is a court order that seals records in government databases. It has no automatic effect on news articles, AI training data, or third-party websites. You must separately request removal from each platform and publication that references the arrest. However, expungement documentation is powerful supporting evidence for your removal requests and should be included in every submission.
How long does it take to get an arrest record removed from AI search results?
Timelines vary significantly by platform. Source article removal or de-indexing typically takes two to eight weeks. OpenAI and Google AI privacy requests can take four to twelve weeks to process. Perplexity and Bing Copilot requests vary by case. In most situations, full clearance across all major AI platforms takes three to six months when pursued systematically. Rushing or submitting poorly documented requests typically extends this timeline.

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