Privacy for law enforcement
Cops, sheriffs, troopers, federal agents, corrections, retired LE, and their families.
Run a free scan. No signup.Why this matters more for you
Cops aren't paranoid. The job creates enemies who remember. Old defendants. Families of people you arrested. Anyone with a grudge and a credit card can pull your home address off Whitepages in 30 seconds.
Your home should not be a Google search away.
What's actually exposed
Run a scan and you'll see your name, current address, prior addresses going back ten years, your spouse, your kids' names, your relatives. All scraped from voter rolls, property records, court filings, old utility bills. Sold to anyone who pays.
The court-filings piece is the one most cops underestimate. A divorce, a traffic case, a small-claims dispute — every one of them captures and prints your address. See scrubbing your address from court records for the motion-to-redact path that actually works.
That data feeds doxxing posts, swatting calls, and the kind of mailbox-pipe-bomb stories that make the news. The chain almost always starts with a broker page.
What state law does
About 14 states have a broker-removal statute on the books — laws that let covered cops and judges force people-search sites to take their info down, with penalties for ignoring the demand. Most are modeled after New Jersey's Daniel's Law. Coverage varies: most only protect judges; NJ, NE, and FL go broadest and cover sworn LE too. They help. They also leave gaps — most brokers operate across state lines, and enforcement is uneven.
We work the laws where they apply. We work the brokers everywhere else.
What we do
Continuous sweeping of 200+ broker sites. When one re-lists you, we re-remove. The job doesn't end after a one-time opt-out, so neither do we.
If your department or union wants to cover everyone, we do that too.