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A government press release is the hardest reputation problem on the internet. The agency that published it controls the domain, Google treats .gov URLs as authoritative, and AI systems cite them as verified facts. This guide covers every major federal and state agency, what removal is genuinely possible, and the strategies that work when deletion is not an option.
You cannot force a government agency to remove its own press release. Agencies control their .gov domains and will not unpublish accurate enforcement announcements in response to individual requests. Factual errors and mistaken identity are the only realistic grounds for a correction from the agency itself.
Google almost never de-indexes .gov content. Government domains receive maximum trust in Google's quality signals. Standard content removal tools apply only in very narrow circumstances involving dismissed charges or expunged records.
The news articles covering the press release are a more actionable target. Journalists who reported on the government announcement are governed by editorial standards that create more leverage than the agency itself -- especially when the underlying matter has been resolved.
AI search has made government press releases significantly more dangerous. LLMs cite .gov content as authoritative fact. An enforcement announcement from 2017 can surface in an AI-generated summary in 2026 as if it describes the current status of an individual or company.
When a private publication runs a damaging story, there are established channels for engaging with it: a correction request, an editorial appeal, a conversation with the managing editor, and in some cases a legal demand. The journalist or editor has professional obligations to accuracy and fairness that create real leverage for people named in coverage.
Government press releases operate under an entirely different framework. The SEC's Office of Public Affairs, the DOJ's press office, the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection -- these are agencies of the United States government. They publish enforcement announcements as a matter of official duty and public record. They are not bound by the editorial standards that govern journalism. They have no equivalent of a "right of reply." And they are almost never willing to delete accurate historical announcements from their public record.
The domain authority problem compounds the content problem. Google's search algorithm assigns extremely high trust to .gov domains because government websites are, in general, authoritative sources operated by accountable institutions. When an SEC press release and a LinkedIn profile compete for the first result on a name search, the SEC press release wins almost every time. The press release was probably published years ago. It has accumulated links from news articles, legal databases, and regulatory reference sites. It is essentially unmovable through standard SEO suppression alone.
The problem has grown more severe with the rise of AI search. Language models trained on internet data treat .gov content as ground truth. When a user asks ChatGPT or Perplexity about a person named in a government enforcement action, the AI system is likely to present the press release content not as a historical document but as current, verified fact -- with no indication that the underlying matter may have been settled, dismissed, or resolved years ago.
Google's Search Quality Evaluator Guidelines place government websites in the highest tier of source authority, alongside established scientific institutions and recognized news organizations. This means a government press release about an individual or company will almost always outrank that person's own website, professional profiles, and media coverage -- particularly in the first three to five years following publication. Standard SEO suppression takes significantly longer to work against .gov content than against standard news articles.
Not all government press releases are equally damaging or equally difficult to address. Understanding the specific agency, the type of action announced, and the likely audience for that agency's coverage helps determine the right strategic response.
SEC enforcement press releases cover securities fraud, insider trading, investment adviser violations, broker-dealer misconduct, and accounting fraud. They are published at sec.gov/litigation/pressreleases/ and typically follow the filing of a complaint in federal district court or the initiation of an administrative proceeding. SEC releases are extensively covered by financial press -- the Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, Reuters, and Financial Times all have reporters who cover SEC enforcement as a beat. A single SEC press release often generates five to twenty secondary news articles within 48 hours of publication.
The audience for SEC press releases includes institutional investors, registered investment advisers, compliance officers, securities attorneys, financial journalists, and any individual or company considering a business relationship with the named party. For public company executives, an SEC enforcement announcement carries the additional consequence of triggering shareholder scrutiny and potential board action.
DOJ press releases are published by the main office and by individual U.S. Attorney's offices across the country. They cover criminal indictments, guilty pleas, sentencing, and civil settlements across every area of federal law -- financial fraud, healthcare fraud, environmental violations, antitrust, and more. DOJ releases are among the most widely picked up by local and national press, because criminal charges generate more reader engagement than civil regulatory actions.
A notable feature of DOJ press releases is that they often include the personal details of named defendants -- home city, approximate age, and the specific allegations -- in language designed for maximum clarity to general audiences. This makes them especially damaging in personal Google searches, because the plain-language description of alleged misconduct is immediately legible to anyone who finds it.
FTC enforcement actions typically target deceptive business practices, privacy violations, data security failures, and anti-competitive conduct. FTC releases are published at ftc.gov/news-events/news/press-releases/ and frequently name both companies and individual executives. The FTC's focus on consumer harm means that its press releases receive coverage in consumer-facing media -- which can be more damaging for companies that sell directly to individuals than purely business-to-business violations.
CFTC press releases cover manipulation of commodity markets, Ponzi schemes involving commodity pools, unregistered trading operations, and derivatives fraud. They are published at cftc.gov/PressRoom/PressReleases/ and receive substantial coverage in financial and commodities trade press. For professionals in the commodities, energy, and agricultural sectors, a CFTC action carries significant career consequences because the agency's jurisdiction covers a relatively small professional community where word travels quickly.
CFPB enforcement actions target financial institutions, mortgage servicers, student loan servicers, debt collectors, and payday lenders. Named parties can be institutions or individual executives. CFPB press releases at consumerfinance.gov/about-us/newsroom/ frequently name specific executives alongside corporate entities, creating personal exposure for individuals who might otherwise have expected corporate liability to shield them.
State AG press releases vary significantly in reach and visibility depending on the state. New York AG announcements, for example, receive national media coverage comparable to federal agencies. California, Texas, and Florida AG actions similarly generate substantial press. Smaller states' announcements may receive limited coverage outside regional media, but they still sit on .gov domains that rank well in Google searches for specific names.
The Food and Drug Administration, Environmental Protection Agency, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, and Occupational Safety and Health Administration each publish enforcement announcements that can name individuals and companies. FDA warning letters and enforcement actions are particularly significant for pharmaceutical, medical device, and food company executives. EPA enforcement announcements reach environmental compliance professionals, lenders financing regulated facilities, and community stakeholders. OCC and FinCEN actions reach the entire banking and financial compliance community.
Government press releases do not stay on government websites. They are picked up by PR Newswire and Business Wire aggregators, legal database services including PACER and Westlaw, compliance monitoring platforms, and news aggregators that republish them verbatim. A person named in a DOJ press release may find that the release appears on a dozen or more indexed domains in addition to the original DOJ page. Each indexed copy is another search result. The suppression challenge is not just addressing the source -- it is addressing the entire syndication network.
The term "removal" covers several distinct outcomes that are often conflated. For government press releases, it is important to understand exactly what each type of removal means, how realistic it is, and what it achieves.
Agency deletion means the government removes the press release from its own website. This almost never happens for accurate enforcement announcements. Government agencies maintain these records as part of the public historical record. In rare cases involving significant errors -- particularly mistaken identity, where the wrong person's name appears in an enforcement announcement -- an agency's communications office may agree to correct or remove a release. This requires documentation proving the error, typically through legal counsel, and a direct approach to the agency's general counsel or public affairs office. Do not attempt this without an attorney.
Google de-indexing means convincing Google to remove the press release URL from its search index so it no longer appears in search results, even though the underlying page still exists. Google's standard content removal tools are not designed for government content. The only applicable category for most enforcement press releases is the "outdated content" removal tool, which requires that the page content has changed substantially or the page no longer exists. Since .gov press releases rarely change, this avenue typically fails. The exception is dismissed charges: if the underlying matter was dismissed, acquitted, or otherwise resolved in the named party's favor, Google's removal tools for outdated legal information are more applicable, and a formal legal petition supported by court documentation has a realistic chance of success.
Suppression means building a body of authoritative content that ranks above the press release in search results. This is the primary practical strategy for the vast majority of people and companies named in government press releases. It does not make the press release disappear, but it changes what someone finds when they search your name. Instead of an SEC enforcement announcement as result one, they encounter your professional profile, your company's website, media coverage of your subsequent work, or thought leadership content that establishes your expertise and current reputation. This takes time and deliberate effort, but it is the most reliable path available.
News article removal addresses the secondary coverage generated by the press release, rather than the press release itself. News organizations that covered the government announcement are subject to editorial standards and are potentially more responsive to correction and removal requests -- particularly when the underlying matter has been resolved. Successfully removing or updating the major news articles that covered a government enforcement action meaningfully reduces the total search result exposure, even when the original .gov press release remains.
Dismissed charges create the strongest grounds for action against both the government press release and the news articles that covered it. If the DOJ or SEC charged you and those charges were subsequently dismissed with prejudice, acquitted, or otherwise resolved in your favor, several options become available that are not otherwise viable: a request to the agency for a follow-up clarifying press release, a more compelling case to Google for de-indexing under outdated information standards, and a significantly stronger editorial argument to journalists who covered the original announcement. Work with a attorney who has government relations experience alongside a reputation specialist to coordinate these requests simultaneously.
The development of large language model search has created a new and particularly serious problem for anyone named in a government press release. Understanding exactly why requires understanding how AI systems handle government content differently from other sources.
When language models like GPT-4, Gemini, or Claude were trained, their training datasets included crawls of the public internet. Government websites were heavily represented in these crawls because .gov content is freely accessible, frequently linked, and generally considered authoritative. This means that enforcement press releases published years before the AI systems' training cutoff are embedded in the models' knowledge base and can surface in response to queries about named individuals or companies.
Retrieval-augmented systems like Perplexity and Google AI Overviews compound this problem. These systems query the live web when generating responses and rank sources by authority. A .gov enforcement press release scores extremely high on every authority signal these systems use: domain authority, inbound links from major news organizations, age of publication, and corroboration across multiple sources. When someone asks Perplexity "Who is [Name]?" or "Tell me about [Company]," a government enforcement press release is likely to feature prominently in the synthesized response -- presented in natural language as a current statement of fact rather than a historical document from a concluded proceeding.
The result is that a press release from 2015 describing charges that were resolved in 2016 can appear in an AI-generated summary in 2026 as if it describes the present situation of the named individual. The AI response does not include the information that the charges were resolved. It presents the allegation as the relevant current fact. For anyone seeking to do business with, hire, or invest alongside the named party, this AI-generated summary may be the first and only impression they form.
For a deeper look at how AI search surfaces old legal content and what can be done about it, our guide on arrest records and AI search results covers the platform-specific removal processes in detail.
The following sequence reflects the order of operations that produces the best outcomes for individuals and companies dealing with government press release exposure. Each step builds on the previous one and should be executed with legal counsel and a reputation specialist working in coordination.
Named in an SEC, DOJ, FTC, or state AG press release? Our specialists have worked through this exact problem for individuals and companies across multiple regulated industries. We assess your situation confidentially and identify the realistic options given your specific agency, matter status, and timeline.
Get a Confidential Assessment| Agency | Press Release Reaches | News Coverage Volume | Agency Correction Possible | Google De-index Viable | Best Strategy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SEC | Financial press, investors, compliance, regulators | Very High | Errors Only | Rarely | News article removal + sustained suppression |
| DOJ / U.S. Attorney | General public, employers, business partners | Very High | Errors Only | Post-acquittal | News article removal + Google petition if acquitted |
| FTC | Consumer media, business press, regulators | Moderate-High | Errors Only | Rarely | Counter-content + news article updates |
| CFTC | Commodities industry, financial press | Moderate | Errors Only | Rarely | Industry counter-content + trade press updates |
| CFPB | Consumer media, financial institutions, regulators | Moderate | Errors Only | Rarely | Suppression + news article removal |
| State AG | Regional media, local business community | Variable by state | Errors Only | Occasionally | Local news article removal + regional counter-content |
| FDA / EPA / OSHA | Industry press, trade regulators, compliance | Industry-specific | Errors Only | Rarely | Industry counter-content + trade publication strategy |
For executives and companies dealing with the broader reputational consequences of enforcement coverage, our article on executive negative news article removal covers the full strategy framework for high-profile individuals navigating press coverage in a professional context.
Understanding how AI systems handle government-sourced content is increasingly important. Our resource on removing content from ChatGPT and AI search explains the current state of platform-level removal requests and what realistic outcomes look like for government-source content.
For those whose government press release exposure relates specifically to financial services regulation, our guide on financial advisor news articles and FINRA BrokerCheck addresses the specific intersection of regulatory disclosure and press coverage that financial professionals face. For SEC-specific enforcement announcements, our dedicated guide on SEC enforcement press release removal covers the agency's unique publishing structure and the strategies that have the highest success rates.
Government press releases are the hardest reputation problem we work on -- and we work on them regularly. Our team has helped individuals and companies named in SEC, DOJ, FTC, and state AG announcements build a path forward.
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