Law Enforcement Requests — AfterOmegle
Maintained by AfterOmegle
Last updated: July 5, 2026
AfterOmegle launched in May 2026 as an independent random video chat platform. This page explains how law enforcement agencies, government authorities, and authorized legal representatives can contact AfterOmegle regarding legal requests, emergency safety concerns, preservation requests, and compliance-related matters. Requests for stored electronic communications and related records are governed in the United States by the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, including the Stored Communications Act (18 U.S.C. § 2703). The DOJ Computer Crime & Intellectual Property Section publishes guidance on legal process for obtaining electronic evidence. This page is available to agencies in all jurisdictions; however, the legal framework it references is primarily US law. Agencies outside the United States may need to use appropriate international legal channels such as MLAT. Consult a qualified legal professional for requirements in your jurisdiction.
For legal and law enforcement requests, contact: [email protected]
For urgent abuse or safety concerns outside formal legal process, contact: [email protected]
If someone is in immediate physical danger, contact local emergency services first. AfterOmegle email channels are not emergency services.
Before Sending a Request
To help us review your request efficiently, please include enough information to understand the issue, verify the request, and identify relevant data if available.
A law enforcement or legal request should include:
- name of the requesting agency or authority;
- name, title, and contact details of the requesting officer or authorized representative;
- official agency email address;
- jurisdiction;
- case number or reference number;
- legal basis for the request;
- type of request being made;
- specific information requested;
- relevant date, time, timezone, or time range;
- any available user, session, report, IP, or technical details;
- deadline, if applicable;
- signed legal process where required.
Requests that are incomplete, overly broad, informal, unverifiable, or missing required legal authority may be delayed or rejected.
Example of an incomplete request:"We need all information on a user who was on your platform on June 1st." This request does not identify the agency, provide a legal basis, name the specific information needed, or include a case number or any technical identifier. It cannot be actioned.
Example of a valid request: A written request on agency letterhead that names the requesting agency and officer, cites a specific legal basis (such as a subpoena or court order), provides a case number, identifies the specific records sought (such as IP address and session logs associated with a reported abuse incident on a specific date and time), and includes officer contact details and a signed copy of the legal process where required.
Types of Requests We May Receive
AfterOmegle may receive different types of legal or safety-related requests, including:
- law enforcement inquiries;
- subpoenas;
- court orders;
- search warrants;
- preservation requests;
- emergency disclosure requests;
- regulatory notices;
- child safety concerns;
- copyright or legal compliance requests;
- requests related to threats, scams, abuse, harassment, or illegal activity.
We review requests based on the information provided, applicable law, user safety, privacy obligations, and platform security.
Emergency Safety Requests
If there is an emergency involving immediate risk of serious physical harm, death, child exploitation, active threats, or another urgent safety issue, law enforcement or appropriate authorities may contact:
Please include "Emergency Request" in the subject line.
Emergency requests should include:
- the nature of the emergency;
- the person or users at risk, if known;
- the specific threat or harm;
- relevant date, time, and timezone;
- any available technical details;
- the requesting agency and officer contact information;
- why immediate disclosure is necessary.
AfterOmegle will review emergency requests as quickly as reasonably possible. We may request additional verification before taking action or disclosing information.
If you are a user and believe someone is in immediate danger, contact local emergency services or the appropriate authority in your region. Do not wait for an email response from AfterOmegle.
Preservation Requests
Law enforcement agencies may request that AfterOmegle preserve available information related to an investigation.
A preservation request should include:
- requesting agency name;
- officer or authorized representative details;
- case or reference number;
- legal basis for preservation;
- specific information or identifiers to preserve;
- relevant date and time range;
- reason for the request;
- requested preservation period, if applicable.
Preservation does not mean disclosure. Preserved information, if available, may require valid legal process before it can be disclosed.
AfterOmegle may not be able to preserve information that does not exist, was not collected, cannot be identified, or is no longer retained under our normal systems and retention practices.
Information That May Be Available
Depending on the situation, technical implementation, retention period, and available records, AfterOmegle may have limited information related to platform safety, abuse prevention, reports, or operational logs.
This may include:
- abuse report information;
- report category;
- approximate report time;
- IP address;
- browser type;
- device type;
- session information;
- cookies or similar identifiers;
- usage patterns;
- safety signals;
- moderation or enforcement information;
- limited technical logs;
- contact emails sent to AfterOmegle.
The availability of information may vary. AfterOmegle does not guarantee that any specific information will be available.
Information We May Not Have
AfterOmegle is designed as a random chat platform and may not provide traditional user accounts or permanent chat history.
Depending on how the platform is configured, we may not be able to provide:
- account recovery information where no account exists;
- full chat logs;
- recordings of video conversations;
- copies of ended video sessions;
- the identity of a stranger from a past chat;
- personal information that users did not provide;
- data outside applicable retention periods;
- information that cannot be linked to a specific session, report, time, or technical identifier.
Random chat sessions are temporary by nature. Requests should include as much specific information as possible to help identify any available records.
User Notice
Where legally permitted and appropriate, AfterOmegle may notify users about legal requests involving their information.
However, we may delay or withhold notice where prohibited by law, where a valid non-disclosure order applies, where notice could create a safety risk, or where notice could interfere with an investigation.
Child Safety and Exploitation Concerns
AfterOmegle does not allow behavior that exploits, endangers, sexualizes, threatens, grooms, manipulates, or harms minors.
Any suspected child-safety issue should be treated seriously. If a child is in immediate danger, contact local emergency services or the appropriate authority in your region.
Law enforcement or authorized agencies handling child-safety matters may contact:
Please include all relevant details, including the nature of the concern, time range, jurisdiction, and any available technical identifiers. For more on how AfterOmegle approaches minor safety, see our Minor Safety Policy and Parent Safety Guide.
Abuse Reports From Users
Users should use the in-app report button during an active chat whenever possible. In-app reports may include session-level safety context that is more useful than an email report.
If a user was unable to report during the chat, they may contact: [email protected]
User abuse reports should include:
- what happened;
- approximate date and time;
- type of violation;
- whether the issue involved nudity, harassment, scam, threat, suspicious link, minor safety, or repeated misuse;
- any relevant non-sensitive details.
Users should not include unnecessary private information, passwords, OTPs, payment details, government IDs, or unrelated screenshots. For more reporting options, see our Report Abuse page.
Valid Legal Process
AfterOmegle reviews legal requests in accordance with applicable law.
We may reject, narrow, or request clarification for legal requests that are:
- incomplete;
- overly broad;
- vague;
- informal;
- unverifiable;
- outside the requesting authority's jurisdiction;
- missing required legal process;
- inconsistent with applicable law;
- requesting information that is not available.
We may also object to requests that appear improper, unsafe, excessive, or legally insufficient.
Data Retention
AfterOmegle keeps information only for as long as reasonably necessary for platform operation, safety, abuse prevention, security, legal compliance, dispute resolution, and enforcement of our Terms of Service and Community Guidelines.
Retention periods may vary depending on the type of information, safety needs, legal obligations, and operational requirements. Some information may be temporary and may no longer be available by the time a request is received.
International Requests
AfterOmegle may receive requests from authorities in different countries or regions. Requests should clearly identify the legal authority, jurisdiction, and applicable legal process. International requests may require additional review or appropriate legal channels depending on the nature of the request and applicable law.
Confidentiality and Security
Legal and law enforcement requests may contain sensitive information. Please send requests only through official channels and from authorized agency or professional email addresses.
Do not send unnecessary personal data, unrelated images, passwords, OTPs, financial information, or excessive attachments.
AfterOmegle may take reasonable steps to verify the authenticity of a request before responding.
Contact for Legal Requests
Quick reference for all contact channels:
| Purpose | Contact |
|---|---|
| Law enforcement, legal process, preservation, emergency requests, regulatory notices | [email protected] |
| Abuse or safety concerns outside formal legal requests | [email protected] |
| Copyright or DMCA notices | [email protected] |
For general contact options, visit our Contact page.
Important Notice
This page is provided for informational purposes only and does not create a contract, legal obligation, or waiver of any rights or objections AfterOmegle may have.
AfterOmegle reserves the right to update this page, request additional information, reject improper requests, and respond in accordance with applicable law.
Updates
| Version | Date | Changes |
|---|---|---|
| 1.0 | July 2026 | Initial publication — law enforcement contact channels, request requirements, emergency and preservation request procedures, information availability, and user notice policy |
| 1.1 | July 2026 | Added 18 U.S.C. § 2703 statute citation; DOJ CCIPS reference; jurisdiction scope note for international agencies; valid vs. incomplete request examples |
Law Enforcement FAQ
Common questions about legal requests, emergency disclosures, and compliance contact channels for AfterOmegle.
Law enforcement agencies, government authorities, and authorized legal representatives should send requests to [email protected]. For urgent abuse or safety concerns outside formal legal process, use [email protected]. If someone is in immediate physical danger, contact local emergency services first.
A request should include the name of the requesting agency, the officer or authorized representative name, title, and contact details, an official agency email address, jurisdiction, case or reference number, legal basis for the request, type of request, specific information requested, relevant date and time range, any available technical identifiers such as IP address or session details, and a deadline if applicable. Requests that are incomplete, overly broad, or missing required legal authority may be delayed or rejected.
AfterOmegle may have limited information depending on the situation, technical implementation, and retention period. This may include abuse report information, approximate report time, IP address, browser type, device type, session information, usage patterns, safety signals, and limited technical logs. AfterOmegle does not guarantee any specific information will be available. Random chat sessions are temporary by nature, and some information may no longer be retained by the time a request is received.
Law enforcement or appropriate authorities facing an emergency involving immediate risk of serious physical harm, death, child exploitation, or active threats may contact [email protected] with "Emergency Request" in the subject line. AfterOmegle reviews emergency requests as quickly as reasonably possible. If you are a user and believe someone is in immediate danger, contact local emergency services first and do not wait for an email response from AfterOmegle.
Where legally permitted and appropriate, AfterOmegle may notify users about legal requests involving their information. However, notice may be delayed or withheld where prohibited by law, where a valid non-disclosure order applies, where notice could create a safety risk, or where notice could interfere with an investigation.
Yes. AfterOmegle may receive requests from authorities in different countries or regions. Requests should clearly identify the legal authority, jurisdiction, and applicable legal process. International requests may require additional review or appropriate legal channels depending on the nature of the request and applicable law.