Search Pierce County Criminal History

Pierce County Criminal History searches are easiest when you sort the record by office. The clerk keeps the circuit court file. The sheriff handles arrest, jail, and incident material. The register of deeds can help confirm a name or residence when the search needs a support record. Pierce County also has municipal courts in Bay City, Ellsworth, Maiden Rock, Plum City, Prescott, River Falls, and Spring Valley, so a local matter may begin in city court before it reaches circuit court. That gives you several ways in, but only one record path is right for the file you want.

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Pierce County Criminal History Records

Pierce County Criminal History searches usually begin at the county courthouse in Ellsworth. The Pierce County Clerk of Circuit Court is at the Pierce County Courthouse, 414 W. Main Street, Ellsworth, WI 54011. The office lists public access terminals and WCCA case search access, which lets you review the docket before asking for copies. That matters when you want to confirm the file before you request a paper copy.

The sheriff side matters just as much. The Pierce County Sheriff's Office is at 411 W. Main Street in Ellsworth. It handles inmate search access, arrest records, and incident reports. If the search begins with a stop, a booking, or a law enforcement report, that office can give you the first detail. Once you have that, the clerk can help you move toward the court record that follows.

The Pierce County Register of Deeds keeps vital and property records at the courthouse. Those records are not criminal history files, but they can help confirm a person with a common name. A birth or marriage record can help with identity. A property record can help with place. That support often makes a Pierce County Criminal History search more precise.

Pierce County also has a tight map of local record offices. The clerk is on Main Street in Ellsworth. The sheriff is just a short walk away on the same street. City courts in River Falls, Prescott, and Spring Valley can hold the first version of a case before the county file takes over. That layout matters when the search starts with a report number or a town name instead of a court docket. It is easy to miss a local layer if you jump straight to the circuit case.

That is why Pierce County Criminal History searches work best when you keep the local and county layers separate. A local court record may give you the first hearing date. The sheriff record may give you the arrest date. The clerk file may give you the final court result. Once those parts line up, the search is much easier to finish and much less likely to pull the wrong file.

Pierce County Criminal History Clerk Records

The clerk office is open Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The phone number is (715) 273-6757 and the fax number is (715) 273-6818. Public access terminals are available, and WCCA gives you online case search access. That combination makes the clerk the main stop when you need a docket view, a copy, or a certified record for a Pierce County Criminal History search.

Copy fees are straightforward. Standard copies are $1.25 per page. Certified copies are $5.00. If you do not have a case number, the office lists a $5 research fee. Those details help you decide whether to gather one more clue before you ask for the record. They also help if you are trying to avoid a second trip to the courthouse in Ellsworth.

The clerk is where the docket becomes a file request. If you already have the case number, the office can move fast. If the name is common, a date range or a report clue helps a lot. That is often the difference between a quick Pierce County Criminal History copy request and a long search.

Pierce County Criminal History Sheriff Records

The sheriff office phone is (715) 273-5051, and the jail uses the same number. Emergency is 911. The office lists inmate search access, arrest records, and incident reports, and the Records Division follows weekday business hours. That makes it the best first stop when a search begins with a law enforcement event instead of a court filing.

Sheriff records often give the detail that the court file leaves out. A report number can point you to the right incident. A booking note can show the date to use. A jail record can confirm that the person was in Pierce County at the right time. That information saves time and keeps the search on the right track.

Used together, the sheriff and clerk create the cleanest Pierce County Criminal History path. The sheriff shows the first contact. The clerk shows the court result. The register of deeds can support the identity check if the case has a common name or a vague date. That layered search usually works better than any single office alone.

Pierce County Criminal History Source Pages

The official clerk page at Pierce County Clerk of Circuit Court is the local source for docket access, copy requests, and courthouse contact details.

Pierce County Criminal History Wisconsin State Law Library county directory

That state directory points the search back to the office that holds the county court file.

The Pierce County Register of Deeds page at Pierce County Register of Deeds is another local office worth checking when you need an identity or address clue.

Pierce County Criminal History Wisconsin DOJ Crime Information Bureau page

That office can help match a person to the right criminal history request when the name is not unique.

The Wisconsin Court System portals at WCCA and WSCCA keep the circuit and appellate side of the search in the official court system.

Pierce County Criminal History Wisconsin circuit court access portal

Those portals are the bridge from a county docket to the broader Wisconsin court record.

Pierce County Criminal History Search Steps

Pierce County Criminal History searches work best when you keep each record type separate. Start with the sheriff if the event began as an arrest, booking, or incident report. Move to the clerk if you need the court file. Use the register of deeds if you need a support record that can confirm identity or residence. That order keeps the request sharp and helps the right office answer faster.

  • Full legal name and any spelling variant
  • Approximate date or year
  • Case number, report number, or jail clue
  • The city or office that first handled the matter

When you need a broader state check, WORCS is the public name-based Wisconsin criminal history portal. DOC offender information helps if the person is under state supervision. Wisconsin Circuit Court Forms is useful when the request needs a formal court form. Those tools keep a Pierce County Criminal History search in the official lane.

The public records rules are set out in Wis. Stat. ch. 19 and Wis. Stat. ยง 165.82. Note: A date and a report clue are often enough to get the right Pierce County office moving.

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