Search Kodiak Warrant Records

Kodiak warrant records usually begin with a name, a case number, or a local office that handled the matter. In the city, the search often moves from the Kodiak Police Department to the courthouse and then to the Alaska State Troopers list if the record is still active. That is the safest way to check a warrant because the same name can show up in more than one place. Start with the court and public safety sources first. Then use the police office to fill in the local record trail. That keeps the search clean and focused.

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Kodiak Records Overview

204 Mission Court Desk
907-486-8000 Police Phone
907-486-4121 Troopers Post
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Kodiak Warrant Records Sources

The Alaska Court System is the best starting point for Kodiak warrant records. The home page at courts.alaska.gov gives you the official access route for forms, case search tools, and public record help. If you want the public case search path, records.courts.alaska.gov is the CourtView entry point. That matters in Kodiak because many warrant checks begin with a court case, not with a police flyer or a third-party list.

The local courthouse is at 204 Mission Road, Room 124, Kodiak, AK 99615. The phone number is (907) 486-1600, and the office is open Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM. If you need the file behind a warrant, that courthouse is the most direct place to ask. It is also the right stop if you want to confirm which court issued the record and whether the file is open for copies.

The first official image source for Kodiak is the Alaska Court System home page. It keeps the city page tied to the court process that starts most warrant record checks.

Kodiak Warrant Records and Alaska Court System

The court image fits Kodiak because the city warrant trail usually starts with a court entry, a docket, or a public case search.

When the search needs the case-file route, the trial courts page at courts.alaska.gov/trialcourts/ shows the request path and the local office structure. That is useful in Kodiak because the city court contact is the place many record questions end up.

Kodiak Warrant Records and Alaska trial courts

The trial-courts image helps because Kodiak warrant records often need a clerk review after the first public search.

Note: Kodiak warrant records are easier to trust when the court entry and the local office confirm the same case number and status.

The first step is simple. Use the full name if you have it, then add the case number, offense, or date if you know any of those facts. A Kodiak warrant search works best when the office gets a tight request. If you only have a name, start in CourtView. If you already know the local agency, call there next and ask which record you should request.

AS 12.35.060 can matter when a warrant came from a missed appearance or another court action. You do not need to lead with the statute to get the record, but it helps explain why a case may still be active. A warrant can stay in the court file even after local paperwork changes, so the city search should always circle back to the courthouse for the final answer.

  • Full name and any alternate spelling
  • Case number, citation, or docket number
  • Approximate issue date or hearing date
  • Police or court office tied to the record
  • Photo ID for in-person requests

Once you have those details, the search moves faster. The office can find the right docket, the right report, or the right status note without a long back-and-forth. That is the difference between a quick check and a slow one.

Kodiak Warrant Records at Local Offices

The Kodiak Police Department is at 217 Lower Mill Bay Road, Kodiak, AK 99615, and the phone number is (907) 486-8000. That office can matter when the warrant trail started with a city report or a police contact. If you are asking about a local incident, the police side may know the report number, the arrest note, or the name attached to the case before the court file is pulled.

The Alaska State Troopers Kodiak Post is at 211 Thorsheim Street, Kodiak, AK 99615, with phone (907) 486-4121. That office matters when the statewide active-warrants list shows the name or when the local matter was served by troopers. In Kodiak, a warrant can move from police to court to troopers without changing the core facts. The difference is where each office keeps its copy.

Office Kodiak Police Department
Address 217 Lower Mill Bay Road, Kodiak, AK 99615
Phone (907) 486-8000
Office Kodiak Courthouse
Address 204 Mission Road, Room 124, Kodiak, AK 99615
Phone (907) 486-1600
Hours Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM
Office Alaska State Troopers Kodiak Post
Address 211 Thorsheim Street, Kodiak, AK 99615
Phone (907) 486-4121

The city search is strongest when it stays close to the office that actually touched the case. If the matter began with Kodiak police, ask for the police record. If it was issued by court, use the courthouse. If the name is already in the troopers feed, compare that result with the local office before you stop.

Tip: A Kodiak warrant can show up in police, court, and troopers records at different times, so one source alone should not end the search.

What Kodiak Warrant Records Show

Kodiak warrant records often show the person’s name, the offense, the issue date, the issuing authority, and the jurisdiction. Many records also include the case number, the bail amount, and the current status. Those facts are the core of the record. They tell you whether the warrant is still open, whether it was served, or whether it has already been recalled.

The record may also show the agency that sought the warrant. That detail helps because a city police record can look different from a court entry, even when both point to the same event. A court docket can show the filing history. A police report can show the incident. The state list can show the active name. Read them together and the story gets clearer.

Some Kodiak records are limited by law or by case type. A sealed file, a juvenile matter, or a restricted entry may not appear the same way in public search tools. If that happens, the clerk can usually tell you what is open and what is not. The lack of a full result does not always mean the record is gone.

Note: A Kodiak warrant file may be partly public and partly limited, so a clerk check can still matter after an online search.

Kodiak State Warrant Records

The Alaska State Troopers active warrants page at hotsheets.dps.alaska.gov/AST/Warrants is the best statewide check when you want a fast status update. It is updated daily. It is public. And it gives you a state source that can confirm whether a Kodiak name still appears active before you make a call to the police or the courthouse.

The broader public safety page at dps.alaska.gov also helps when you want the Alaska Department of Public Safety behind the warrant list. If the case goes beyond the city or borough, the U.S. District Court for the District of Alaska at akb.uscourts.gov is the federal stop. Federal and state records are separate, so it is smart to check both only when the facts point that way.

When a Kodiak name shows up on a list, the next move is plain. Confirm the court file, match the agency, and use the right local office for the record. That keeps the search tied to official sources instead of guesswork.

Kodiak Warrant Records and Alaska State Troopers active warrants

The troopers image fits Kodiak because the daily active list is the state check most people use before they call the city office.

Kodiak Warrant Records and federal court resources

The federal image keeps the city page complete for cases that may need a separate federal check.

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Kodiak Warrant Records Help

The borough page is the next step if you want the courthouse, police, troopers, and federal links together in one wider Kodiak Island Borough search path.

View Kodiak Island Borough Warrant Records