Mugshots for Profit: The Wild West of Digital Shaming
Let’s talk about a little corner of the internet that smells like a rotten bologna sandwich left in a squad car’s glovebox during a Texas summer: mugshot websites. You know the ones, RecentlyBooked.com, WhoGotBusted, and a dozen others with names that sound like rejected reality shows on truTV. These sites proudly display your worst photo ever taken (unless you’re a Kardashian) and act like they’re doing the Lord’s work by publicly shaming people who may or may not have committed a crime.
There’s more regulation around selling lemonade to toddlers than there is around publishing a mugshot that could tank someone’s future.
But here’s the kicker, a whole lot of folks whose mugs appear on these digital pillories were never even convicted. Some were never even charged. Charges dismissed, wrong person, bad evidence, mistaken identity, or just the system being its usual clumsy, bureaucratic mess. Doesn’t matter. The photo stays up. Forever. Like a high school yearbook photo from hell. Want it removed? That’ll be $400, please. (CashApp, Zelle, or Bitcoin accepted. Karma not.)
Here’s the darker, greasy-underbelly part of this story, many of these sites are run, or at least quietly influenced by folks in the system. We’re talking deputies, court clerks, probation officers, even bail bondsmen who somehow have fast access to booking photos and miraculously find a way to “publish” them before you get your shoe strings out in booking.
Let’s call it what it is: profiting off people’s pain. It’s one thing to work in law enforcement. It’s another thing entirely to run a side hustle that capitalizes on the misery of people who might be legally innocent. That’s not public service, that’s public exploitation.
Imagine if a nurse took selfies with patients in the ER and charged them to delete the pics. That’s the level of ethics we’re talking about here.
If the government is going to just sling mugshots out into the digital wild for bottom-feeding websites to monetize like they’re flipping NFTs of your worst night ever, then maybe, just maybe, the person in the photo should get a cut. After all, it’s their face. Their reputation. Their job they probably lost. Their dating profile that just became a crime documentary.
If you’re going to make a dime every time someone googles “Derek from HR DUI 2023,” then Derek should be getting royalties like he’s on Netflix.
The scary part? You, yes, you, can start one of these websites today. No credentials. No license. No ethics required. Just a domain name, a PO box, and a complete lack of empathy. It’s like playing God with a WordPress template.
There’s more regulation around selling lemonade to toddlers than there is around publishing a mugshot that could tank someone’s future. And let’s not pretend this is just about “public information.” If you’re using it to make money, it’s not about transparency, it’s about traffic and clicks and shame dollars.
Let’s be brutally clear, charging people to take down their mugshots is extortion-lite. Especially if their case was dismissed or they were acquitted. It’s basically saying: “Nice clean record you got there. Be a shame if someone… Googled it.”
No one should have to pay to prove their innocence, especially not to the same system that wrongfully made them look guilty in the first place.





