You probably don’t think about court records until one suddenly appears in your search results. Maybe someone sends you a link. Maybe you see it yourself while searching your name. Either way, the feeling is the same — shock, frustration, and wondering how to make it go away.
Court records can be on government sites, news articles, or legal databases. Once they’re online, they can be indexed by search engines and show up for years. Some cases are old, resolved, or even dismissed, but the record remains.
The good news is you have options. You can limit who sees them, remove some from public view, and control how your name appears online.
Why Court Records Appear Online
Public Access Rules
In most places, court records are public by default. This is meant to keep the justice system transparent. Anyone can search certain cases by name.
Data Aggregators
Sites collect public records and republish them. Some even optimize these pages for search engines so they show up quickly.
Legal Databases
Platforms like casemine and others store court opinions, filings, and related documents for reference. These are often used by lawyers and journalists, but they can also appear in search results for your name.
Figure Out Where the Record Lives
You need to know the source before you can act.
Search your name on Google and other search engines. Check the first two or three pages of results. Open each link and note where it’s hosted.
Common sources include:
- State or county court websites
- Legal research platforms
- News sites covering the case
- Data broker or background check sites
Write down the full URLs. You’ll need these for removal or suppression requests.
Check If It Can Be Removed
Expunged or Sealed Records
If your case was expunged or sealed, the court can often remove it from their public site. This may also allow you to request removal from third-party sites.
Site Policies
Some sites will remove records if they are inaccurate, outdated, or tied to a dismissed case. Others will only remove them if required by law.
Data Broker Opt-Outs
If your record appears on a people search site, check their opt-out page. Many will remove it if you verify your identity.
A man in Arizona once told me he cleared five separate sites in a week by using their opt-out forms. It didn’t remove every trace, but it pushed the record far down in search results.
Contact the Source Directly
Once you know the site hosting the record, find their contact or removal form. Be polite, clear, and direct.
State the reason for removal:
- The case was dismissed
- The record is inaccurate
- The record is sealed or expunged
Provide proof if you have it. That could be a court order, docket sheet, or official letter.
If you get no response, follow up in a week. If that fails, you may need professional help or legal assistance.
Suppress What You Can’t Remove
Not all records can be deleted. In those cases, your goal is to bury them under more positive and relevant results.
Publish content under your name. This could be:
- Personal website or blog
- Profiles on LinkedIn, business directories, or portfolio sites
- Articles, interviews, or guest posts on trusted platforms
Search engines often rank fresh, reputable content higher than older public records. A small business owner I know published three local news stories about her charity work. Within two months, her court record dropped from page one to page three of Google.
Monitor Regularly
Even if you remove or bury the record, new versions can pop up. Set up Google Alerts for your name so you know when something changes.
Check your search results every month. Keep your positive content fresh and updated.
When to Get Professional Help
Some cases are complex. If a record is on a high-authority site, or if multiple sites are republishing it, you might not have the time or skill to handle it yourself.
Reputation management companies can speed up removals, coordinate suppression campaigns, and watch for new appearances. They also know the right contacts at major platforms to get faster results.
Leading Tools and Services for Court Record Issues
Erase
Specializes in removing harmful search results, including court records.
Best for: Individuals or businesses with sensitive legal content in search results.
Guaranteed Removals
Helps remove or suppress unwanted online records, news articles, and data broker entries.
Best for: People facing widespread record distribution.
Reputation Galaxy
Pushes down unwanted results using targeted SEO and new positive content.
Best for: Long-term suppression when removal isn’t possible.
Your Action Checklist
- Search your name and list all record URLs
- Identify the source site for each link
- See if your case is eligible for removal or sealing
- Contact the site with proof for removal requests
- Opt out from any data broker listings
- Publish new content under your name to push old results down
- Monitor monthly for new appearances
Court records online can feel permanent, but they’re not always untouchable. Some can be removed entirely. Others can be buried so deep they’re unlikely to be found.
The key is to move quickly, keep detailed records of your efforts, and build a strong presence that reflects who you are now, not who you were in a past legal matter.
You don’t have to face it alone. If the work becomes overwhelming, there are services that know the process inside and out. The sooner you start, the sooner you control what people see when they search your name.