Find Iron County Criminal History
Iron County Criminal History searches work best when you match the office to the record type first. The clerk of circuit court keeps the county court file. The sheriff handles inmate, arrest, and incident material. The register of deeds can help when a name, place, or family link matters too. Iron County gives you several ways in, but each office serves a different job. Start local, then use WCCA or the state tools when you need a broader view. That keeps the search steady and helps you avoid the wrong office on the first try.
Iron County Overview
Iron County Criminal History Records
The main court office is the Iron County Clerk of Circuit Court at the Iron County Courthouse, 300 Taconite Street, Hurley, WI 54534. The phone number is (715) 561-4084, and the fax number is (715) 561-2749. The office lists weekday hours from 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM, public access terminals, and WCCA online case search. Copy fees are $1.25 per page and $5.00 certified, and the office notes a $5 research fee when you do not have a case number.
The sheriff keeps the law enforcement side of the record trail. The Iron County Sheriff's Office is at 300 Taconite Street in Hurley. The phone number is (715) 561-3800, and Sheriff Tony Furyk oversees the office. Inmate information is available, and arrest records and incident reports are part of the request path. That makes the sheriff a practical first stop when the search starts with custody or a booking.
The Iron County Register of Deeds is also in the courthouse at 300 Taconite Street in Hurley. The office phone is (715) 561-4024. It keeps vital records and property records, including birth, death, and marriage certificates. That record path can help confirm the right person before you ask for the court file.
Iron County also has municipal court matters in Hurley, Montreal, and Pence. That layer matters because a case can begin as an ordinance or traffic matter and never move into circuit court. The municipal case may be the first record that explains why a person appears in a county search later. Knowing that distinction keeps the work from landing in the wrong office.
For broader Wisconsin help, the state court forms page at Wisconsin Circuit Court Forms and the Wisconsin State Law Library county directory at Wisconsin State Law Library county directory are useful fallback pages. They keep the search in the official state system when the local office is clear, but the next step is not.
Iron County Criminal History Source Pages
The Wisconsin State Law Library county directory at wilawlibrary.gov/topics/county.php gives you a statewide directory view when the local path is not enough.

That directory keeps the search pointed at the county contact path instead of a generic web result.
The DOJ background page at Wisconsin DOJ Crime Information Bureau explains the statewide criminal history repository and the public name-check path.

That screen matters when a county search needs a broader Wisconsin check before you settle on the right file.
The state court portal at WCCA gives you the circuit docket view, and WSCCA handles appellate access when a case moves beyond circuit court.

That court screen helps when an Iron County Criminal History search starts online and then needs the paper file.
Iron County Criminal History at the Clerk
The clerk office is the cleanest route when you need the paper file. The office is at the Iron County Courthouse, 300 Taconite Street, Hurley, WI 54534. The phone number is (715) 561-4084, and the fax number is (715) 561-2749. The office hours are Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. That is useful when you need to call before you travel or before you mail a request.
The clerk page says public access terminals are available and WCCA online case search is open. Copy fees are $1.25 per page and $5.00 certified. Those details matter when you need a docket line or a full paper trail. They also matter when the record is older and you need staff help to locate the right file.
The office is also where an online docket becomes a real file request. If you already know the case number, WCCA can help you check the docket before you ask for the copy. If you do not, the clerk can still help, but a narrow name and date range will move the search faster.
Iron County Criminal History and Sheriff Records
The sheriff's office is the better first stop when the search starts with an arrest, a jail event, or an incident report. The Iron County Sheriff's Office is at 300 Taconite Street in Hurley, and the public phone number is (715) 561-3800. That level of detail matters because sheriff records often hold the first official note in an Iron County Criminal History search.
The sheriff page says inmate information is available, and arrest records and incident reports are part of the request path. Those details can show the first report, the custody step, or the place where the event started. They can also help when a person has similar names across more than one county and you need the local clue first.
The sheriff office can also help you decide whether the event stayed in Iron County or moved elsewhere. That is especially useful when the search begins with a county seat address but the report clue is thin. A short, specific request usually gets a better answer than a broad one.
In a county this size, names repeat fast. A clear date and place clue can save a second call.
What Helps an Iron Search
Good search details save time and help staff find the right file.
- Full name and any spelling variant
- Approximate year or date range
- Case number, if you already have it
- Whether you need a docket, copy, or certified record
- Any office name already tied to the record
If you need a statewide result, the public name-check portal at WORCS is the direct route. It is helpful when the county result is incomplete or when you want to see whether the same name appears in the Wisconsin criminal history repository. If the case moved beyond circuit court, WSCCA can show the appellate side of the case trail.
When forms are part of the request, the state forms page at Wisconsin Circuit Court Forms keeps the process in the official system. The public records law at Wis. Stat. ch. 19 and the criminal history authority at Wis. Stat. 165.82 explain the access framework behind the request.
Iron County Criminal History research works best when the office, the record type, and the time period are clear before you send the request. That keeps the search simple and the result cleaner.