The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Police agree to stop adding Lego heads to mugshots

- By Stefanie Dazio

The Murrieta Police Department has been handcuffed by Lego after the toy company asked the agency to stop adding Lego heads to cover the faces of suspects in images it shared on social media.

Murrieta police had been using Lego heads and emojis to cover people's faces in posts on social sites since at least early 2023. But the altered photos went viral last week after the department posted a statement about its policy, prompting several news articles and, later, the request from Lego.

“Why the covered faces?” the department wrote March 18 in an Instagram post that featured five people in a lineup, their faces covered by Lego heads with varying expression­s. The post went on to reference a California law that took effect on Jan. 1, limiting department­s in sharing mugshots on social media.

“The Murrieta Police Department prides itself in its transparen­cy with the community, but also honors everyone's rights & protection­s as afforded by law; even suspects,” the department wrote.

Across the U.S., law enforcemen­t agencies have often posted galleries of photos for “Mugshot Mondays” and “Wanted Wednesdays” to social media in efforts to bolster community engagement.

But critics increasing­ly point to the harmful effects of putting such images online. For people awaiting trial, mugshots can carry a presumptio­n of guilt. And for anyone seeking to move past a criminal conviction, the images can make it hard to get a job and haunt them for the rest of their lives.

Under California's new law, police department­s and sheriff's offices are now required to remove any booking photo they shared on social media — including of people arrested for violent offenses — within 14 days unless specific circumstan­ces exist, such as the person remains a fugitive and an imminent threat to public safety.

It builds on a previous version that took effect in 2022. The prior law prohibited posting mugshots of all nonviolent

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