Lego doesn’t want toy heads in mug shots
After social media exposure, company asks the Murrieta Police Department to cease the practice.
The maker of Lego toys has asked the Murrieta Police Department of Riverside County to stop using digitally added Lego heads to hide the identities of suspects in mug shots.
The request comes after the department last week posted a photo on social media of suspects with their faces hidden by the yellow heads, writing that they did so to comply with a new state law.
“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 post said.
The California Legislature passed Assembly Bill 1475 in 2021 prohibiting local law enforcement from publishing mug shots of suspects in nonviolent crimes. The Murrieta Police Department has instead used photoshopped Lego heads as a way around the regulation.
The state also passed AB 994 last year, which requires mug shots of any suspect to be removed from social media within 14 days unless there are special circumstances.
After the altered mug shots gained traction on social media, Lego asked the department to stop using the heads in their posts, Murrieta Police Lt. Jeremy Durrant confirmed Friday. He emphasized that it was an amicable conversation and that the department cooperated fully.
Durrant previously told The Times in an email that the department has been obscuring faces in mug shots in various ways for the last couple of years and that the practice was not unusual.
Durrant told Fox News the department is exploring other ways to publish content that interests and engages the public now that the Lego heads are off the table.
“The Lego Group reached out to us and respectfully asked us to refrain from using their intellectual property in our social media content which of course we understand and will comply with,” the Police Department said in a statement, according to Fox News.