Juneau Warrant Records Search

Juneau warrant records give you a way to check an active warrant, match a name to a police report, and see which local office holds the next piece of the record. Start with the Juneau Police Department warrant page for a quick public check, then move to the records request form or the courthouse if you need the file behind the notice. Juneau keeps the search close to home, but the path can still run through city police, the court clerk, and the Alaska State Troopers. If the name is yours, use the official office first.

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Juneau Warrant Access

Weekly Warrant Page
6255 Alaway JPD Address
907.500.0640 Police Records
8:00-4:30 Court Clerk Hours

Juneau Warrant Records and City Files

The Juneau City and Borough also keeps municipal records that can help when a warrant search needs more than a police notice. City Hall at 155 S Seward Street holds the Clerk's Office, which maintains Assembly minutes, ordinances, resolutions, and municipal code. That does not replace the warrant page, but it gives you another official Juneau record source when the search needs city context or a local paper trail.

The Alaska Court System records portal is the image source for this Juneau page because it matches the public record side of the search. The portal is the cleanest state site for court case research, and it fits the record path that often follows a police warrant entry. If you need a case number, a ticket number, or the court file behind a warrant, that is where the search expands.

Juneau warrant records and municipal records at the Alaska Court System records portal

That record path matters because Juneau searches often move between city records and court records before the full picture is clear.

Note: City records can help anchor a warrant search, but the warrant itself still needs to be confirmed with police or the court.

Juneau Warrant Records at JPD

The Juneau Police Department is the first local office most people use when they need Juneau warrant records. The warrant page is public, updated weekly, and built from Alaska State Court System records tied to JPD cases. The public notice is clear about one thing: do not try to apprehend or detain anyone. If you have information about someone on the page, call JPD or your local law enforcement agency. That keeps the record search where it belongs, with the people who can confirm it.

JPD records requests are handled through the approved records search request form. The department says requests must be in writing. A verbal request from anyone other than a JPD employee will not be accepted. The form works best when it is specific. Use your name, address, phone number, incident details, and your role in the case. That gives staff a direct path to the right file and keeps the request from stalling.

Office Juneau Police Department
Address 6255 Alaway Avenue
Juneau, Alaska 99801
Records Phone 907.500.0640
Warrant Phone (907) 586-0600
Form JPD approved records request form

JPD reviews requests on a first-come, first-served basis. The Records Unit gives a status update within 5 business days of receipt. Requested records may be sent by U.S. mail, electronic delivery, or given directly to the authorized requester. Government requests may also be sent by email or facsimile. That makes the process practical, but it also means the request should be complete the first time you send it.

Some records do not leave the file room. Open investigations, pending charges, and cases with a suspect who has not yet been adjudicated may not be released. Confidential material is redacted from reports, photos, audio, and video. Third-party reports from hospitals, other police agencies, or fire departments are not released. That keeps the Juneau warrant trail clean and tied to the records that can actually be shared.

Juneau warrant records work best when you search in order. Start with the JPD warrant page. If the name or case is still unclear, move to the courthouse. If you still need a current status check, compare it to the Alaska State Troopers list. That order gives you a public notice, a court file, and a statewide backstop. It also helps you keep the search in official hands instead of relying on reposted copies or third-party summaries.

When you call or visit, bring the facts that matter. A warrant search gets easier when you know the full name, the incident date, the place where it happened, or the case number. If you are asking for your own file, keep your request simple and direct. If the record belongs to someone else, the agency may need more detail before it can find the right report. The goal is not a broad search. The goal is the right record.

  • Full name and any other spelling used
  • Incident date, place, and case details
  • Your phone number and mailing address
  • Your role in the case or reason for the request

Once JPD accepts the request, staff can deliver the record by mail, email, or in person. Some responses are quick. Others take a little time if the file needs redaction or review. That is normal for police records. What matters most is that you have the right office and the right details before the request goes in.

Juneau Warrant Records at Court

The Juneau Courthouse is at 123 4th Street, Juneau, AK 99801, and the clerk can be reached at (907) 463-4700. Office hours are Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM. That is the place to ask about court copies, docket information, and the file behind a Juneau warrant. If the police notice gives you only a name, the clerk can help you move from the notice to the case record.

The court system's public site at courts.alaska.gov and the trial courts page at courts.alaska.gov/trialcourts/ are the best official starting points before you walk in. They help you confirm the right office and the right records path. For online case review, records.courts.alaska.gov can show case information by name, case number, or ticket or citation number. That makes it easier to match the warrant to the case that produced it.

City cases often move quickly from police to court. If you need the file, the court record may be the better source than the warrant notice. It can show the charge, hearing dates, and the docket path that explains how the warrant was issued. When you are dealing with your own name, that is the part that matters most because it tells you which office actually controls the next step.

Juneau State Warrant Records

Juneau also has a local state law enforcement office that matters in a warrant search. The Alaska State Troopers Southeast Detachment serves Juneau from the Department of Public Safety system at 2760 Sherwood Lane, Suite 2A, Juneau, AK 99801. The phone number is (907) 465-4000. If a Juneau record came from a trooper case, that office helps connect the statewide piece to the local one.

The statewide active warrant list at hotsheets.dps.alaska.gov/AST/Warrants is updated daily and available in CSV and PDF. It is an official place to compare a name against a current statewide list. If your name appears, do not try to handle it on your own. Call the proper office, verify the entry, and let law enforcement or the court manage the next step. That is the safe route and the one the state warns the public to use.

AS 12.25.030 and Alaska Criminal Rule 4(c)(3) give the legal context for how a warrant becomes part of the record trail. You do not need to be a lawyer to use them as guideposts. You only need to know that the court file, the police notice, and the statewide list each serve a different role in the search.

What Juneau Warrant Records Show

Juneau warrant records usually tell you more than just a name. A public notice may show the person named, the issuing agency, and the current warrant status. A court file can add the charge, the hearing trail, and the docket history that led to the warrant. A police record can add the incident details that started the case. Put together, those records give you a usable view of what happened and where the file now sits.

That matters when you are checking your own name. It also matters when you are helping a family member or trying to match a police notice to a real case. The best search is narrow and official. Start with JPD, move to the court, and then compare the statewide troopers list if you still need a current status check. That keeps the search focused and avoids bad assumptions.

Juneau warrant records can also help you tell the difference between an active entry and an older file that has already moved through the system. The warrant page gives the public notice. The clerk gives the file. The troopers list gives the statewide snapshot. Once you know which office has which piece, the record becomes much easier to work with.

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Juneau Warrant Records Help

Juneau warrant records are best handled through the police warrant page, the JPD records request form, the Juneau Courthouse, and the Alaska State Troopers list. If you need to keep going, use the official office that matches the record you are trying to find.

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