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Court Records · Google Search

Why Court Records Show Up in Google: And How to Remove Each Source Type

Court records show up in Google because Google indexes whatever is publicly accessible on the web—and court records are public information published across multiple sources simultaneously. But “why” matters less than “which source”—because the removal strategy depends entirely on where the content is actually hosted.

By Anthony Will Est. 2013 ~8 min read
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Key Takeaways — Why Court Records Show in Google
In this article
  1. The Three Sources of Court Records in Google
  2. Official Court Systems: Why They Rank So Well
  3. Legal Research Platforms: Private Businesses with Different Rules
  4. Background Check Aggregators: High Volume, Often Manageable
  5. Frequently Asked Questions
Understanding the Source

The Three Sources of Court Records in Google

When a court record shows up in a Google search for your name, it’s coming from one of three sources—and the removal strategy for each is completely different.

Source Type Why Google Indexes It Authority Level Removal Path
Official court portal (PACER, state e-filing, county clerk) Government website, high trust, publicly accessible Very high — government domain Court petition (sealing/expungement) required
Legal research platform (Casetext, FindLaw, PlainSite, CourtListener, UniCourt) Private company republishing public court data as a service High — established legal domain Platform-specific privacy/removal request
Background check / people-search aggregator Private company aggregating public records for consumer use Medium Opt-out process; state privacy law claims

Misidentifying the source type leads to a mismatch between the strategy and the target. Sending a GDPR request to a government portal is ineffective. Sending a court petition to a legal research platform is unnecessary. Identify the source, then use the right tool.


Official Government Sources

Official Court Systems: Why They Rank So Prominently

Official court system websites—PACER for federal cases, state e-filing portals, county clerk websites—rank prominently in Google for two reasons: (1) they are government domains with high inherent authority, and (2) they are frequently updated and crawled, making Google’s index of their content current.

Why it’s hard to remove from official sources

Court records are public information by design. The American legal system’s presumption of open access to court proceedings is constitutionally grounded. Removing content from official court systems requires a formal legal action—expungement, record sealing, or a court order directing restricted access.

What actually works for official sources

For criminal records with dismissal or expungement grounds, an attorney-filed petition is the appropriate path. Some states have specific statutory processes for sealing arrest records even without a conviction. For civil cases, sealing is available in very limited circumstances (trade secrets, minor involvement, certain sensitive matters).

Practical alternative

Even if official source removal isn’t available, Google de-indexing of the specific government URL can be pursued through Google’s Outdated Content Tool or Personal Information Removal request. The official page stays live, but Google’s index entry for it can sometimes be addressed. The official court record and the Google search result for it are two different problems with two different solutions.


Private Legal Research Sites

Legal Research Platforms: Private Businesses with Their Own Rules

Legal research platforms are frequently confused with official court systems—they look authoritative, they publish court documents, and they appear prominently in search results. But Casetext, FindLaw, PlainSite, CourtListener, DocketAlarm, DocketBird, UniCourt, PACERMonitor, and Leagle are all private companies.

They are not government entities. They choose to republish public court data as a service—and as private businesses, they have their own policies around privacy requests. This distinction matters enormously for removal: an official court system requires a legal petition. A private legal research platform requires a privacy request to a private company.

Platform-by-platform approach

For the full platform-by-platform breakdown, see our guide on removing court records from Google and legal research platforms.


Aggregator Sites

Background Check Aggregators: High Volume, Often the Most Manageable

Background check and people-search sites that republish court record data—Spokeo, BeenVerified, Intelius, MyLife, Whitepages, and many others—are private businesses aggregating public information. They are the most volume-producing source of court record search results (many sites, many listings) and often the most manageable through systematic opt-outs.

The opt-out strategy

  1. 1
    Identify every site where your court record appears.
  2. 2
    Locate the opt-out or data removal process for each—typically accessible from the site’s privacy policy or footer.
  3. 3
    Submit opt-out requests with documentation of the case outcome if available.
  4. 4
    Cite state privacy laws where applicable (California CCPA, Virginia CDPA, Colorado CPA, and others).
  5. 5
    Monitor for re-addition—some sites re-aggregate data and require repeated opt-outs.
For dismissed or expunged cases

Use the case outcome as the basis for a dispute rather than just an opt-out. Many sites have specific dispute processes for outdated or inaccurate records. A dismissed case characterized as an active charge is arguably inaccurate—frame the dispute accordingly. This approach often yields faster compliance than a standard opt-out.

For complex situations involving multiple sources and persistent results, professional news article removal through Reputation Resolutions provides a coordinated approach across all source types. RemoveNews.ai offers a free evaluation to identify which sources are ranking and what removal path applies to each.


If Removal Fails

When Court Records Can't Be Removed from Google: What We Can Do

Understanding why court records appear in Google is the foundation for knowing which removal paths are available -- and where they run out. Google indexes court records because the underlying sources are publicly accessible: aggregator sites, legal research platforms, news articles, and official court portals all publish public record data that Google's crawler processes and ranks. When de-indexing requests to Google are declined because the content serves a legitimate public interest, and when the underlying sources decline removal requests, the situation is not without options -- it is a question of shifting strategies. The most effective alternatives are: requesting NOINDEX tags from aggregator and background check sites that have more flexibility than news organizations, using Google's outdated content tool for source pages that have since been updated or removed, and executing a suppression campaign that builds authoritative, well-indexed content about you across professional profiles, publications, and press coverage so that the court record is no longer the dominant result for searches of your name.

Professional help provides the complete picture -- every URL ranking for your name, the source type behind each, and the specific path that applies to each source -- rather than a single approach applied uniformly to a complex situation. Reputation Resolutions, the team behind RemoveNews.ai, has worked with more than 5,000 clients over 13+ years on court record and Google search situations across every record type and jurisdiction. We work on a pay-for-results basis, so you pay only if we achieve the agreed outcome. The initial consultation is free, and within one business day you receive a direct, honest answer on what is realistically achievable for your specific situation -- including timeline and cost.

Not Sure What's Possible?

Court record situations vary significantly depending on the platform, the record type, and your jurisdiction. Our specialists review your case individually and give you a direct answer -- including realistic options, timeline, and cost. Schedule a free consultation and hear back within one business day.

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FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does Google show my court records when I search my name?
Google indexes publicly accessible web pages—including court records published by official court systems, legal research platforms, and background check aggregators. Google’s algorithm prioritizes authoritative, relevant sources, and court-related content from government domains and established legal platforms tends to rank well for name-based searches because it’s specific, personally identifying, and from trusted domains. Google doesn’t evaluate whether information “should” still be public or whether it’s harming you; it indexes what’s accessible and ranks it by its signals.
Can I request that Google not show court records when someone searches my name?
You can request that Google de-index specific URLs through applicable tools—but not simply because the content is unwanted. For EU/UK residents, GDPR provides formal rights to request de-indexing of personal data from search results. For US residents, Google’s Personal Information Removal tool applies to content meeting specific criteria. Outdated Content requests apply when source pages have changed. For most court record content that doesn’t meet these specific criteria, source removal (getting the platform to take down the content) or suppression (building competing content that outranks the court record) are the practical approaches.
Will my court record disappear from Google if my case is expunged?
Not automatically. Expungement seals your official government record in the court system—it doesn’t instruct Google to remove its index entries, nor does it require private legal research platforms or background check aggregators to remove their copies of the data. After expungement, you need to pursue each source separately: contact legal research platforms with your expungement documentation, submit opt-out requests to aggregators citing the expungement, and use Google’s removal tools for any URLs that qualify. Your expungement order is powerful documentation in all of these requests—but the process of using it has to be done by you, not by the court system.

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