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Why ACD Cases Still Leave Mugshots Searchable

February 12, 2026 remove mugshot

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You complete an ACD.

The court dismisses your case.
Officials seal the record.
The law treats the arrest as a nullity.

You expect everything to disappear.

But when someone searches your name, Google still shows your booking date, booking number, or charges in a snippet.

In some cases, the page says “Access Restricted.”
At other times, it requests payments.
It may require a form or a phone verification.

Nevertheless, the information appears in search results.

Why does this happen?

To answer that, you need to understand what an ACD actually does — and what it does not do.

What an ACD Actually Means

An ACD, or Adjournment in Contemplation of Dismissal, is a legal resolution used in New York and similar jurisdictions.

Prosecutors pause the case for a set period, usually six months to one year. During that time:

  • The case stays open
  • The defendant must meet certain conditions
  • No conviction occurs

If the person completes the conditions, the court dismisses the case.

After the ACD period ends:

  • The court seals the record
  • The arrest becomes a legal nullity
  • The person returns, legally, to pre-arrest status

An ACD does not require an admission of guilt. Lawmakers designed it to protect first-time offenders from long-term damage to employment or education.

However, sealing a record does not erase digital traces that were already published.

That is where confusion starts.

Understanding Mugshot Databases

Government agencies publish booking information for transparency and security. Corrections departments and law enforcement facilities maintain searchable databases on their websites.

Users can typically search by:

  • Last name
  • First name
  • Date of birth
  • Booking number
  • Booking date
  • Charges

For example, the Austin Police Department maintains a Booking Photo Database that includes booking photos from agencies using Travis County Central Booking. The department clearly states it does not accept liability for decisions based on that information.

Similarly, corrections systems provide public services. The Arkansas Division of Correction offers:

  • Inmate Search
  • Inmate Deposit Service
  • Prepaid Phone Service
  • Secure messaging
  • Video visitation

These tools help citizens access information, submit payments, or contact a facility. Corrections divisions maintain this data to serve security and operational needs.

They are not designed to manage search engine indexing.

If a booking page is publicly accessible, even briefly, Google can crawl and store parts of it.

That moment of access matters.

Why Booking Information Gets Indexed

When officers arrest someone, they take a booking photograph and record the booking date, booking number, charges, and facility.

Agencies then post that information online.

If Google’s crawler reaches that page before restrictions apply, it can store:

  • Page titles
  • Snippets of visible text
  • Structured data
  • Booking details

Later, the website may restrict access behind a login or payment system. However, Google may continue showing the stored snippet.

The page may be restricted for users.
The search engine may still display content that it has already indexed.

That explains most visibility issues.

Restricted Access vs. Indexed Content

A restricted page blocks users.

An indexed page appears in search results.

Those are not the same thing.

If a website does not use proper no-index instructions, Google may keep the preview visible. Even after the site limits public access, the search result can remain.

Security systems protect the database.
They do not automatically remove search previews.

That distinction often surprises people.

Why Sealing Does Not Remove Search Results

When someone completes an ACD:

  • The court seals the record
  • The official website removes the mugshot
  • The law treats the arrest as if it never occurred

However, law enforcement retains sealed records in non-public systems. Certain agencies can still access them for limited purposes.

More importantly, commercial third-party websites do not always follow court sealing orders.

If those sites scraped booking information before sealing, they may continue displaying:

  • Booking date
  • Charges
  • Booking number
  • Facility name

Many mugshot websites do not monitor court updates. Some focus on traffic. Others monetize visibility.

Google reflects what it indexed at the time. It does not automatically verify court outcomes.

Why Paywalls Do Not Fix the Problem

A paywall limits user access.

It does not necessarily block search engine indexing.

If the page:

  • Was public at one point
  • Lacks a no-index directive
  • Contains crawlable metadata

Google may still show a preview.

Security and access control protect users.
They do not automatically protect search visibility.

That technical difference matters.

Why Snippets Can Remain for Years

Even years after sealing:

  • Cached versions may remain
  • Aggregator sites may repost the information
  • Third-party databases may retain archived data

The court may seal the record.
Digital copies may still exist elsewhere.

Because many third-party sites do not update automatically, outdated booking information can remain searchable long after dismissal.

That gap between legal sealing and digital indexing creates the issue.

What You Can Do

If you see booking information in Google:

  1. Confirm your ACD completion date.
  2. Verify that the official website removed the record.
  3. Identify third-party websites displaying the information.
  4. Use the website’s contact form to request correction or removal.
  5. Document your booking number and court disposition.
  6. Monitor search results over time.

If the source removes outdated content, you may request updates to the search engine results.

In complex cases, a legal professional may need to intervene.

Transparency vs. Privacy

Corrections facilities must protect security and maintain accurate records. At the same time, the ACD process is designed to protect citizens from long-term harm following dismissal.

Both priorities can coexist.

However, search engines preserve information differently from courts.

A sealed record means sealed legally.
It does not always mean that it was erased digitally.

Understanding that distinction helps you take informed action rather than assuming the system has failed.

Conclusion

An ACD dismissal protects your legal record.

It does not automatically remove previously indexed booking information from search engines.

Search engines store what they crawl.
Paywalls do not always erase previews.
Sealing does not retroactively delete third-party copies.

If snippets remain visible, you can take steps to correct or suppress outdated information.

Knowing how indexing works gives you clarity — and control — over your next move.

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