Court Case Name Still Online? Here’s How to Bury or Remove It from Search
You’ve gone to court. You’ve done your time. You’ve moved on.
But Google hasn’t.
If your name is still tied to a court case showing up online — whether it’s in a news article, legal listing, or archived document — it can feel like you’re being punished over and over again. Employers see it. Family see it. Strangers judge it.
At Reputation Station, we make it disappear — from page one, and from your daily life.
Why Google Keeps Showing Court Results
Court case names are often published with your full legal name, making them powerful in search engine indexing. Even if the case is old, resolved, or no longer relevant, that result can sit there for years — often pushed up by news articles, court databases, or forums that repeat the same headline.
Google won’t remove it unless there’s a major privacy breach or legal obligation. That’s not good enough. And that’s exactly why people call us.
Our Court Suppression Strategy
We don’t send takedown requests and hope for the best. We go after the article or listing with a full suppression strategy designed to push it down and make it invisible.
That includes:
- Building new, positive, high-authority content
- Location-specific SEO (especially for Aussie cases)
- Strategic backlinks and indexing control
- Real-time monitoring and adjustment
You’ll usually see the result shift within the first month, with most clients seeing full suppression from page one in 3 to 4 months.
We Don’t Talk Theory. We Deliver Results.
We’ve helped clients across Australia remove or bury court-related content — from regional drug charges to high-profile assault cases. Whether it’s on The Herald Sun, WA Today, Brisbane Times, or a local court listing — we know how to shut it down.
And we don’t hand you a guide. We do it for you.
Let’s Put This Behind You — Properly
Call us now on 1800 622 359 or email info@reputationstation.com.au.
We’ll assess your case, map out your strategy, and start cleaning things up right away.
You’ve dealt with the court. Now let us deal with Google.