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Mugshot Sites · News Articles

Mugshot Websites vs. News Articles: Two Problems, One Solution

Your arrest photo is sitting on two different types of sites, and the removal strategy for each is completely different. Mugshot aggregator sites are legally distinct from news organizations, vulnerable to state law enforcement, and often removable without a lawyer. News articles are harder. This guide explains both problems and how to tackle them together.

Read time: ~8 min Published: May 12, 2026 By: RemoveNews.ai
Key Takeaways

Understanding the Difference

Mugshot Aggregator Sites vs. News Organizations: A Legal Distinction That Matters

When people discover their arrest photo online, they often assume all the sites hosting it operate under the same rules. They do not. The legal distinction between a mugshot aggregator site and a news organization is significant and shapes every aspect of your removal strategy.

A news organization publishes arrest information as part of genuine editorial judgment. A reporter decides a particular arrest is newsworthy, writes a story, and the arrest photo may accompany the coverage because it serves the public record. This editorial function receives substantial First Amendment protection, even when the subject finds the coverage embarrassing or harmful. Courts have consistently upheld the right of news organizations to publish accurate information about arrests, even decades-old ones, based on this editorial function.

Mugshot aggregator sites operate under an entirely different model. Sites like BustedMugshots, Mugshots.com, Arrest.org, JustMugshots, and dozens of similar operations use automated processes to bulk-scrape publicly available booking records from county jails and law enforcement databases. The photo is published automatically, with no human editorial judgment about whether publication serves the public interest. The business model is typically built around charging subjects fees ranging from $30 to $400 to remove their own photo.

This distinction, automated bulk republication for profit versus editorial journalism, is precisely why state legislatures have been able to pass laws targeting mugshot sites that would be unconstitutional if applied to news organizations. The First Amendment protects editorial judgment. It does not protect a commercial scheme that profits from publishing information about private individuals without any journalistic purpose.

Legal Context

Courts in several states have found that mugshot sites do not qualify as "news" under state shield laws or FOIA exemptions. In Oregon, a 2016 state law banning mugshot removal fees was upheld in part because the court found that the sites' primary purpose was commercial extraction rather than journalism. This distinction matters when you are deciding how to frame your removal request and whether to threaten legal action. News publishers will invoke their editorial independence. Mugshot sites, particularly those charging removal fees in states where that is illegal, are on weaker ground.


Your Legal Rights

State Laws That Ban Mugshot Removal Fees

The pay-for-removal business model that many mugshot sites rely on has been targeted by legislation in more than a dozen states. Understanding which laws apply to your situation gives you significant leverage in removal negotiations and, in some cases, grounds for a legal complaint or civil action.

States With Mugshot Fee Laws

Georgia enacted O.C.G.A. Section 16-9-93.1, which makes it a misdemeanor to charge a fee for mugshot removal and allows civil suits for violations. Oregon passed ORS 646.607(1)(hh), prohibiting the unfair trade practice of charging for mugshot removal. Texas enacted Texas Business and Commerce Code Section 109.002, which bars charging fees for mugshot removal and allows recovery of attorney fees in civil suits. Utah and Colorado have similar consumer protection provisions targeting the same conduct. Illinois passed the Mugshot Publication Act, which requires removal within 30 days of a request and prohibits fees. California enacted Civil Code Section 1798.91.1, which prohibits charging fees for removing photos from commercial sites and requires removal within 30 days of a request accompanied by proof of dismissal or acquittal.

Even in states without specific mugshot fee legislation, broader consumer protection laws may apply. Most state attorneys general accept complaints about unfair or deceptive trade practices, and filing a complaint with your state AG's office often prompts action from mugshot sites that want to avoid regulatory scrutiny.

Do Not Pay Removal Fees

If you live in a state with a mugshot fee law and a site demands payment for removal, paying the fee may undermine your legal claim and signals to the site that the scheme works. Instead, send a written demand citing the specific state statute, give the site 30 days to comply, and file a complaint with your state attorney general if they do not remove the photo. In states with private rights of action, you may be entitled to attorney fees if you prevail in litigation.

Mugshot showing up on multiple sites? We handle simultaneous removal across all major mugshot platforms and the news articles that reference them.

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Platform Comparison

Major Mugshot Sites: Removal Methods and Timelines

Mugshot Site Removal Method State Law Coverage Typical Timeline Cost
BustedMugshots Online removal request form; state law demand letter Covered in GA, OR, TX, IL, CA, CO, UT + others 7 to 30 days Free with state law demand
Mugshots.com Demand letter; state AG complaint; DMCA for photo copyright Covered in most states with fee laws 14 to 60 days Free via legal demand
Arrest.org Online removal request; state law demand Partial coverage varies by state 7 to 21 days Free
JustMugshots Removal request form; state law demand letter Covered in most states with fee laws 14 to 45 days Varies; free in covered states
Local News Article Editorial request; attorney letter; Google de-indexing State fee laws do not apply 2 to 16 weeks Varies; often requires professional help

Step-by-Step Process

How to Pursue Mugshot Website Removal

Mugshot removal is most effective when approached methodically. Contacting every site simultaneously without documentation often leads to delays and rejections. The following sequence produces the best results across major sites.

  1. 1
    Document every site and URL where your mugshot appears. Before contacting anyone, do a thorough search using your name plus terms like "mugshot," "arrested," and "booking photo." Record every URL. Many people address the first result they find and then discover weeks later that a dozen other sites have copies. A complete list at the start prevents this problem.
  2. 2
    Gather your case disposition documentation. If your charges were dismissed, reduced, or resulted in acquittal, obtain a certified copy of the court disposition record. If you received an expungement, obtain a certified copy of the expungement order. This documentation significantly strengthens every removal request you send. Many sites process requests faster when you can demonstrate the case did not result in a conviction.
  3. 3
    Send a written demand to each site citing applicable state law. Your demand should include: your full name, the specific URL of the page hosting your photo, your state of residence, a citation to the applicable state statute if your state has a mugshot fee law, a statement that you are not offering or accepting payment for removal, and a demand for removal within the statutory period (typically 30 days). Send by email and retain copies of all correspondence.
  4. 4
    File a state attorney general complaint if the site does not comply. Most state attorneys general have an online complaint portal. Filing a complaint creates an official record and, in some cases, prompts direct contact from the AG's consumer protection division to the site operator. In states like Texas, Georgia, and Illinois, AG complaints in this area have historically produced results.
  5. 5
    Request Google de-indexing for sites that still do not comply. Google has policies that specifically disadvantage sites whose primary purpose is to republish personal information for commercial gain without editorial value. After sending a removal demand, if a site ignores it, you can submit a Google content removal request for personally identifiable information. This does not remove the photo from the site, but it removes it from Google search results. See our guide on removing arrest articles from Google for the full process.
  6. 6
    Consider a DMCA notice where applicable. In rare cases where a mugshot was taken by a private photographer or a booking photo is subject to a copyright claim, a DMCA takedown notice to the site's hosting provider can compel removal. This is less common because most booking photos are government-produced and may be in the public domain, but it is worth evaluating in consultation with an attorney for specific situations.
From Our Team

The biggest mistake people make with mugshot removal is paying removal fees to sites in states where those fees are illegal, then having no recourse when the photo reappears on a different site weeks later. Sites that charge illegal removal fees frequently re-list photos after a few months. A legal demand letter, backed by a state statute, produces more durable removals because the site has ongoing liability if it republishes. We always advise clients in covered states to pursue the legal route rather than paying.


When Both Intersect

When a News Article Links to or Embeds a Mugshot

A common and particularly damaging scenario occurs when a local news article about an arrest links directly to a mugshot site, embeds the booking photo, or references a mugshot URL. In this situation, you are dealing with two distinct problems that must be addressed in the right sequence.

The mugshot site is typically the weaker legal position and the easier target. Start there. Once the mugshot is removed from the aggregator site, the embedded image on the news article becomes a broken image or a dead link. This weakens the visual impact of the news article significantly, even if the article itself remains published.

However, removing the mugshot from the aggregator site does not remove the article. The article still contains your name, the arrest information, and typically a description of the charges. To address the article itself, you need a separate editorial request to the news publisher, a legal argument grounded in defamation or outdated information, or a Google de-indexing request. Our guide on removing an old arrest article from Google covers these options in detail.

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

FAQ: Mugshot Website Removal

Are mugshot websites legal?
In most U.S. states, publishing publicly available arrest booking photos is legal. However, many states have enacted laws prohibiting mugshot sites from charging fees to remove photos. States including Georgia, Oregon, Texas, Utah, Colorado, Illinois, California, and others have passed legislation targeting the pay-for-removal business model. Violating these laws can result in civil liability and attorney fee awards against the site operator.
What is the difference between removing a mugshot from a website and removing a news article?
Mugshot aggregator sites collect and republish public booking records with no editorial judgment or news value, which means they lack the First Amendment editorial protections that news publishers enjoy. This makes them more legally vulnerable to state law complaints and direct removal demands. News articles, by contrast, are protected by stronger press freedom principles and require a different approach based on editorial negotiation, legal defamation arguments, or Google de-indexing requests.
Can I sue a mugshot website for publishing my photo?
In states with mugshot removal fee laws, you may have a civil claim if a site charges you for removal. Additionally, if a site publishes your mugshot after your charges were expunged and refuses to remove it despite proper notice, some states provide a right of action. Consulting with a privacy or defamation attorney is advisable before pursuing litigation, as outcomes vary significantly by state and by the specific site's business practices.

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