Tag: spent conviction suppression request australia

  • Removing Old Legal News from The Australian and Court Listing Sites – How to Protect Your Name in Google

    If your name appears in The Australian or on a court listing site, chances are it’s still ranking highly in Google — even if the matter was resolved, dismissed, or irrelevant today. Whether it was a brief mention or a full legal write-up, that content has a long shelf life online and can destroy your reputation, credibility, and career.

    At Reputation Ace, we help clients across Australia remove, suppress, and de-index these types of articles and listings so your name can move on — even if the internet hasn’t.


    Why These Legal Mentions Stick Online

    Legal reporting and court records are designed to be permanent — but that doesn’t mean they should sit on Page 1 of Google forever.

    Most court stories that rank in Google come from:

    • The Australian (News Corp)
    • ABC News, The Age, and Herald Sun
    • Public court record databases or legal news syndication
    • Aggregators that scrape legal outcomes and republish them

    These articles tend to:

    • Include full names
    • Be structured for SEO
    • Get syndicated or scraped, making them hard to contain
    • Appear for years under search terms like your name, your name + location, or your name + charges

    Even if the case was withdrawn, spent, or irrelevant today, it still causes major damage.


    How We Get This Content Removed, De-indexed, or Buried

    🔴 Step 1: Legal-Based Removal Requests

    We issue legally framed takedown notices to The Australian or the database owner, focusing on:

    • Spent conviction laws
    • Outdated or excessive disclosure
    • Breach of privacy or safety
    • Court suppression orders
    • Non-public figure exposure causing lasting harm

    In many cases, these arguments result in either:

    • The article being edited, toned down, or removed,
    • Or the listing being blocked from search via a robots.txt or meta tag

    🟡 Step 2: Google De-Indexing (Without Publisher Consent)

    Even if the content stays live, we can go straight to Google and apply for removal from search results.

    We use arguments grounded in:

    • Australian privacy standards
    • Mental health and reputational harm
    • Outdated or irrelevant legal outcomes
    • Ongoing professional or personal impact
    • Protection of minors or third parties

    We’ve had strong success de-indexing legal content without touching the original publisher.

    🟢 Step 3: Suppression of Legal Mentions from Page 1

    To fully clean Page 1, we flood Google with positive and neutral content that ranks higher than the court article.

    This includes:

    • High-ranking articles on business, lifestyle, or industry sites
    • Press releases optimised with your name and location
    • SEO blogs, videos, directories, and professional bios
    • Social assets and microsites controlled by us

    We carefully structure and cross-link everything so Google favours the new content — and the legal mention sinks to Page 2 and beyond.


    Timeline & Ongoing Management

    We start working immediately, with early movement visible in the first 3–5 days, and major ranking shifts within 3–4 months.

    Everything is handled on a rolling monthly basis — $995 AUD/month. No upfront fees, no contracts. We keep working until your reputation is stable.


    Let’s Clean It Up

    If you’ve got a legal mention haunting your name, send us:

    • Your full name
    • The link(s) to the article or legal listing
    • Any background (e.g. resolved case, spent conviction, suppression order)

    We’ll assess it, then get to work.


    📞 Click to call: 1800 622 359
    ✉️ info@reputationace.com
    🌐 www.reputationace.com