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A two-sentence police blotter from 2018 can rank for your name in 2026. Here's why these brief notices are often the most removable content online, and exactly how to get them down.
Police blotter articles are factual when published - removal requires showing they're now outdated (charges dropped, case dismissed, expungement) rather than inaccurate at the time.
Dismissed charges and expungements are your strongest arguments - many publications have explicit removal policies for people whose cases were resolved in their favor.
Google's outdated content tool is the fastest path for articles over 6 months old - it can remove police blotter results from search even if the publication refuses to take down the article.
Mugshot removal sites have different processes than news publishers - some require legal takedowns, others accept direct requests, and a few charge fees (often exploitatively).
A police blotter is a brief public record of arrests, incidents, or calls for service, published by local law enforcement or a local news outlet. Unlike a full news story about an arrest, a blotter entry is typically auto-generated from a police log: name, age, town, charge, date. One to three sentences, often with no byline and no editorial judgment involved in its creation. It exists because the police logged it, and local papers publish police logs as a community service.
The ranking problem is structural. Local news sites carry high topical authority for local names. When your full name appears in a small geographic footprint, a local domain that publishes regularly and gets crawled frequently will surface that entry near the top of Google results for your name. The blotter page is often freshly updated (new entries are added constantly), which signals to Google that the content is active and worth crawling. Your name attached to a charge, in an indexed page on a high-authority local domain, is a formula for a persistent first-page ranking.
The problem compounds through syndication. A single blotter entry at the source - the police department's website or the local paper's blotter page - gets scraped and republished by crime brief aggregator sites, neighborhood apps, and local crime blogs. One incident can generate five to ten indexed URLs, all ranking for your name, all pointing back to the same original two sentences from a police log.
Here is the important framing, and the reason this guide exists separately from our guide on removing full arrest stories: a police blotter is not journalism. No reporter researched it. No editor approved a story angle. No one exercised news judgment about whether this particular person's arrest served public interest. It was an administrative record, published automatically, dressed up as content. That distinction is the foundation of every successful blotter removal request.
The single most useful thing to understand about blotter entries is that they carry almost no editorial investment. A full news story about an arrest has a reporter, an editor, a publication decision, a headline. A blotter has a police log entry and a CMS that published it automatically. That difference in editorial investment is why blotters are significantly more removable than full articles. No one is defending a blotter entry as important journalism, because it isn't.
When an editor receives a removal request for a full investigative piece, they weigh the journalistic investment: the reporter's time, the editorial decision to publish, the public interest rationale that made the story worth writing. Removing a full article requires an editor to essentially say that the original publication decision was wrong. That's a high bar, and editors resist it for professional reasons.
A blotter entry presents no such obstacle. No journalist invested editorial energy in it. No editor chose to write about this person specifically. When you ask a managing editor to remove a blotter entry, you are not asking them to repudiate a publication decision. You are asking them to remove an administrative record that was auto-populated into a page, served its brief informational purpose at the time, and now causes ongoing harm to a private individual while serving no current reader.
The public interest test makes this argument concrete. What ongoing public interest does a 2019 DUI blotter entry serve? Who is reading it today for a purpose that justifies its continued indexing? The answer is: no one. The entry was useful as a contemporaneous public safety notice. Its continued appearance in Google results five years later serves no reader. It serves only the search result, and it harms the person named.
In our practice at RemoveNews.ai, blotter removal requests succeed more often than full article removal requests when properly framed. The editorial resistance is lower, the public interest argument is stronger, and most local publishers have no particular attachment to their blotter archives. They published the entry because they publish police logs. Keeping it indexed indefinitely was never a considered editorial position.
Not sure if what you're dealing with is a blotter or a full article? Use our free tool to assess your situation and draft the right request.
Start FreeThe approach differs meaningfully depending on where the blotter entry lives. Here is the breakdown by source type:
| Source Type | Right Contact | Most Effective Ask |
|---|---|---|
| Local newspaper blotter page | Digital editor or managing editor | Remove the specific entry, add NOINDEX to the URL, or update with case outcome |
| Police department website or social media | Public Information Officer (PIO) | Remove or update the entry with resolution documentation |
| Crime brief aggregator sites | Site owner or privacy request form | Privacy-based removal request through their stated process |
These are typically managed by the news desk with minimal editorial investment. The right contact is the digital editor or managing editor, not the reporter whose byline appears (if there is one) on the broader blotter roundup. Your ask should be specific: either remove the entry for your name, add a NOINDEX tag to the specific URL where it appears, or update the entry with documentation of how the case resolved. Most local editors will consider at least one of these options if the request is professionally written and includes documentation. For broader strategies on removing negative newspaper articles, including archive and syndication issues, see our dedicated guide.
Police departments are often the original source of blotter data. They can remove or update entries from their own websites when provided with documentation that charges were dropped, a case was resolved favorably, or no charges were ever filed. The right contact is the department's Public Information Officer. Do not call the detective who handled the case, do not call the arresting officer. The PIO handles media and public records inquiries, and they have the authority to act on your request. Be formal, be brief, attach documentation, and make a specific ask.
Sites like Crimemapping.com, local crime blogs, and neighborhood apps including Citizen or Nextdoor pull from public records automatically. Important legal note: DMCA claims do not apply here because facts are not copyrightable, and police logs are public records. These platforms generally have two workable paths: a privacy request or opt-out mechanism built into their site, or direct email to the site owner framing your request as a privacy matter rather than an editorial argument. For Nextdoor specifically, submit a privacy request through their help center. For local crime blogs, find the site owner's contact through a WHOIS lookup or the site's contact page and email directly.
The blotter removal request is shorter and structurally simpler than a full article removal request. It does not need extensive grounds arguing or detailed case law. Editors know what a blotter is. They know its editorial weight. Your job is to make the request easy to act on, not to write a legal brief.
A well-constructed blotter removal request includes five elements:
For guidance on the broader craft of writing removal requests, including subject line formulas and tone, see our full guide on how to write a news article removal request. The blotter request borrows those principles but should be considerably shorter - a blotter is a two-sentence entry and your request to remove it should feel proportionate.
When the source won't remove the entry, Google's Outdated Content Removal Tool is particularly effective for blotter entries, and here is why: blotter pages are typically active, regularly updated pages. New entries are added, old entries may be removed or reorganized, and the page's URL content changes over time. By Google's own definition, this makes blotter entries strong candidates for the Outdated Content Tool, which is designed for exactly this scenario: a URL that Google has cached in a state that no longer reflects the current page.
The process: go to removecontent.google.com, select "Outdated content," and submit the specific URL where your blotter entry appears. If the police department's website has been updated since the entry was published, or if the local paper's blotter page has been reorganized, you have an even stronger case. Google looks for pages where their cached version contains information that no longer appears at that URL.
For entries that refuse to de-index even after the Outdated Content Tool submission: pursue a NOINDEX request to the publisher as a parallel track. A NOINDEX tag on the specific URL removes it from Google search results without requiring the publisher to delete anything. Many publishers who resist full removal will agree to NOINDEX because it costs them nothing and preserves their archive. Once the NOINDEX tag is in place, submit the URL again through the Outdated Content Tool to accelerate Google's removal of the cached version.
See our complete removal and de-indexing guide for the full suppression strategy when neither removal nor de-indexing fully resolves the situation.
Rather than asking for full removal - which some publications resist as a matter of stated policy - ask for a NOINDEX tag on the specific URL. A NOINDEX instruction tells Google to remove the page from search results without requiring the publisher to delete anything from their system. The article or blotter page still exists at that URL. It is simply no longer indexed. This ask succeeds significantly more often than full removal because it costs the publisher nothing, preserves their archive, and eliminates the search harm to you. Always offer it as an explicit alternative if the publication pushes back on full removal.
One police blotter entry at the source typically becomes several indexed URLs. The police department's website has it. The local paper's blotter page has it. Two or three aggregator sites scraped it. A local crime blog may have picked it up. A neighborhood app may have logged it. When someone searches your name, they find not one result but a cluster of results all pointing to the same two-sentence incident from years ago.
Before you contact anyone, audit the full scope. Search your name in quotes, add the year, and add the charge keyword listed in the blotter. Look through the first three pages of results and build a list of every URL that surfaces the entry. This audit takes fifteen minutes and it tells you what you are actually dealing with.
Prioritize by Google ranking. The highest-ranking URL causes the most practical harm. Start there. A successful removal or de-indexing of the number-one-ranked URL eliminates the vast majority of the search impact, even if lower-ranked copies persist. The aggregator copy on page three of results is causing you far less harm than the local paper's blotter entry on page one.
For aggregator sites: most have privacy request forms or contact emails. Frame your request as a privacy matter rather than an editorial argument. You are a private individual whose personal information (name, charge, incident date) appears on their platform without your consent, from a case that has since been resolved. Request removal or suppression of the specific entry. Many aggregators will comply with a politely stated privacy request, particularly when you can show the case was resolved.
You may not get every copy of a blotter entry removed. That is a realistic outcome, and it is not a failure. Removing the top two or three ranked results eliminates 90 percent of the practical harm from a blotter entry. The copies on page three and beyond of search results are rarely seen by anyone who matters to your professional or personal life. Set your goal accordingly: clear the first page of results for your name, not every URL that exists anywhere on the internet.
Our free tool drafts the removal request and finds the right contact at the publication or police department. Takes 60 seconds.