How InmateSearcher Collects, Sells, and Shares Your Personal Information
What is InmateSearcher?
ZoomInfo specializes in compiling detailed professional profiles, including names, work emails, phone numbers, employment history, company affiliations, and buyer intent signals. Businesses use ZoomInfo's database to target individuals for sales, marketing, and recruiting campaigns, often without the individual's direct consent. Their aggressive data aggregation methods and difficulty of full removal make them one of the more dangerous data brokers for working professionals.
URL
inmatesearcher.com
Support
inmatessearcher.com/optOut/name/landing
Type of Data Broker
Marketing
Aggression level
Critical
What InmateSearcher collects and how your privacy is at risk
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This company is listed in our Top 100 Most Aggressive Data Sellers based on sensitivity and reach.
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Collects and sells basic details like your name, address, phone number, and email address.
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Collects and shares information about your family members, relationships, and household makeup.
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Collects and monetizes data related to your income, spending habits, debts, and financial status.
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The company’s practices pose a heightened risk for identity theft, scams, discrimination, and profiling.
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Collects and distributes your work history, job titles, company affiliations, and professional connections.
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Tracks your browsing habits, online searches, shopping behaviors, and content preferences.
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Tracks and sells your location history, movements, and device-based geolocation data.
The risks shown are based on the types of personal data this company collects, sells, or shares.
Even limited data collection can expose you to serious privacy threats.
Companies like InmateSearcher are selling your information right now.
Most data brokers make opting out difficult or impossible. We locate your exposed data, remove it, and continue monitoring as new brokers are added.
Create your free account now to see where your data is exposed and begin securing your privacy.
How to Opt Out and Remove Your Information from InmateSearcher
Because InmateSearcher draws from broad, often independently maintained public records, removal is more challenging than simply deleting a database entry. Even if a record is removed, the underlying public record (from court filings, jail records, property records) remains unchanged — and may be re‑indexed or re‑submitted in future data updates.
Additionally, removal often requires manual verification steps, which some individuals may find confusing or time consuming. Removal does not guarantee that third‑party archives, caches, or search‑engine snapshots have been cleared.
Enroll in mePrism Privacy to ensure continuous monitoring and removal from InmateSearcher and other brokers.
InmateSearcher Privacy Risks and How to Remove Your Personal Data
They scrape and aggregate your personal data:
InmateSearcher draws on public records from county jails, state prisons, federal prisons and other correctional facilities across the United States. That may include arrest records, incarceration status, facility details, booking data, and (where available) criminal charges or sex‑offender information.
They engage in automatic data harvesting:
Aside from public records, InmateSearcher collects personal data from people who use the website (first and last name, email) — for example when contacting them, submitting forms, or requesting services. Even if you're simply trying to see what data InmateSearcher has on you, the site may collect your personal information during that process — including your name, email address, and other details you submit when making a request or searching their database.
Opting out is possible, but removal is difficult:
InmateSearcher may cross‑reference public records (inmate/facility data) with other publicly available records (e.g. past addresses, aliases, possibly relatives) to build more complete profiles. According to third‑party removal guides, the database may include names, aliases, date of birth or age, address history, social‑media links, and other public‑record indicators such as bankruptcies, traffic offenses, and court records.
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