![]() ![]() puts people's mugshots online, and then demands payment to take them down. was presented with a juicy fillet of poetic justice. This is the business model: publishes people’s mugshots, without their knowledge or consent, and then it extorts them for removal of the content.īut last week, Jesse T. Jessie T.: Hey, I’d like my stuff removed. Unknown male: This third time tell you f**king bitch we never answer your calls again you’ve been permanently published faggot bitch. He turned on his recorder and answered.Īccording to court documents, this is the transcript from that call, which Jesse T. Then, he got a call from an unlisted number. called a total of five times, but all he got was a recording. When he called the 800 number, a man told him he’d need to fork over $399 to have his mugshot taken down. It lacked any mention of the fact that he hadn’t been charged or convicted. #MUGSHOTS COM EXTORTION FULL#The site listed his full name, address, gender, and the charge for which Jesse T. ![]() What he found: the arrest information had been published to a site called. He got nary a nibble: zero response, no return calls, no acknowledging emails, no invitations to come in for an interviewĪ year after his arrest, a friend told him she’d searched for him online and found his mugshot. estimates that he went on to submit 100 applications for jobs in the electrical field, construction, manufacturing, and labor. He was released 12 days later without being charged for a crime. On 2 September, 2013, a California resident, Jesse T., was arrested and booked into the Sonoma County Jail.Īs is standard procedure, police took his mugshot and his fingerprints. ![]()
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