Search Juneau City and Borough Warrant Records

Juneau City and Borough warrant records help you check active warrants, match a name to a court file, and understand where the record came from. Start with the Juneau Police Department warrant page if you need a fast public list, then move to the courthouse or the court records portal when you need more detail. The search path is local, but it runs through city police, the Juneau courthouse, and Alaska court systems. If you are checking your own name, use official offices and confirm the status before you take any step.

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Juneau Warrant Records Overview

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123 4th St Juneau Courthouse
907.500.0640 JPD Records
907.465.4000 State Troopers

Juneau Warrant Records Basics

The Juneau Police Department posts active warrants that come from Alaska State Court System cases tied to JPD matters. The page is updated weekly, so it works as a current public check when you want a quick look at names that may still be active. The public notice is direct: do not try to apprehend or detain anyone on your own. Instead, confirm the record through law enforcement or the court. That keeps the search safe and keeps the record tied to the office that issued it.

Warrant names are not guilt findings. They show that a warrant exists, not that the person was convicted. If a name appears, the public notice says to call JPD at (907) 586-0600 or contact local law enforcement if you are outside Juneau. That advice matters because the public list is only one part of the record trail. The warrant may connect to a case file, a police report, or a court order that explains why the warrant was issued.

The first Juneau image row points straight to the official JPD warrant page. It is the best local source to start with when you need a Juneau warrant record, a current active list, or a quick check against the city police notice.

The official Juneau Police Department warrants page is the place to start when you want the current active warrant notice for Juneau City and Borough.

Juneau City and Borough warrant records and official police warrant notice

That source is local and current, which makes it a strong first stop before you move on to the courthouse or the state tools.

Note: If a Juneau warrant is yours, confirmation should come from JPD or the court, not from a guess based on a name alone.

Juneau Warrant Records at the Courthouse

The Juneau Courthouse at 123 4th Street, Juneau, AK 99801 is the place to go when a warrant needs a court file behind it. The Court Clerk's Office can be reached at (907) 463-4700, and the office is open Monday through Friday from 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM. That makes the courthouse the local stop for case questions, copy requests, and follow-up on records that are not fully answered by the warrant list.

Office Juneau Court Clerk's Office
Address Juneau Courthouse
123 4th Street
Juneau, AK 99801
Phone (907) 463-4700
Hours Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM
Website courts.alaska.gov

For online court research, the Alaska Court System's trial courts page at courts.alaska.gov/trialcourts/ helps you confirm where to ask for records and which office handles the file. The statewide records portal at records.courts.alaska.gov is also useful because it lets you search by name, case number, or ticket or citation number. Cases from 1990 to the present are in the system, which gives Juneau searchers a broad starting point.

The court side matters because it shows the file that created the warrant. When the warrant grew out of a criminal case, the court record can show the charge, the filing path, and the status of the case that led to the order. That is where AS 12.25.030 and Alaska Criminal Rule 4(c)(3) come into the picture. The rule framework tells you why the court paper trail is worth checking, especially when the local warrant notice only gives you a name and a current status.

If you already know a case number, use it. If you do not, a full name and a rough date range can still help. The clerk can tell you whether a file is public, whether copies are available, and whether you need to use a different record request path. That is the practical side of Juneau warrant records: the public notice is useful, but the courthouse explains the record.

Juneau warrant records can be searched in stages. Start with the JPD warrant page, then check the courthouse, and then use the state tools if you still need a current answer. That order keeps the search grounded in official records. It also helps when a name appears in more than one place, because the police notice, the court file, and the statewide list can each show a different part of the same story.

The Juneau Police Department says records requests should be made on the approved records search request form. The request should include the name, address, phone number, incident details, and the person's role in the case. That is enough to let staff find the right report. Verbal requests from people outside JPD are not accepted, so written requests are the cleanest path when you need a report tied to a warrant or arrest.

  • Full name and any spelling variant
  • Address and phone number for the request
  • Incident date, location, and case details
  • Your role in the case or your connection to it

Once the request is in, JPD reviews it on a first-come, first-served basis. The Records Unit provides a status update within 5 business days of receipt. Records may be sent by U.S. mail, electronic delivery, or handed directly to the authorized requester. Government requests may also be sent by email or facsimile. That makes the process fairly direct, but only if the request is complete the first time.

Some records stay limited. Open investigations, charges that are still pending, and cases with an identified suspect who has not yet been adjudicated may not be released. Confidential details are redacted from reports, photos, audio, and video. Third-party reports from hospitals, other departments, or fire agencies are not released. Those limits matter because the record you want may exist, but not all of it will be public in the same way.

Juneau State Warrant Records

When a Juneau search needs a statewide check, the Alaska State Troopers Southeast Detachment is the local state office to use. It serves Juneau from the Department of Public Safety network and is located at 2760 Sherwood Lane, Suite 2A, Juneau, AK 99801. The phone number is (907) 465-4000. If the record you are chasing came from a trooper case, this office is part of the local path.

The statewide active warrants list on hotsheets.dps.alaska.gov/AST/Warrants gives you a second official place to compare names and warrant status. The list is posted in CSV and PDF formats and is updated daily. That makes it useful when the Juneau page is not enough by itself or when you want a current check on a name before you contact the court or police. It is still a public list, so the warning remains the same: do not try to detain anyone on your own.

The Juneau warrant trail often moves between city police and state records. That is why the local warrant page, the courthouse, the troopers list, and the court records portal all matter together. One office can tell you the public status. Another can show the case file. A third can confirm the statewide entry. When the pieces line up, the search becomes much easier to trust.

For broader state context, the Department of Public Safety homepage at dps.alaska.gov is the parent site for the troopers and their warrant resources. If you need to follow a statewide record path from Juneau, that is the official door to the system.

What Juneau Warrant Records Show

Juneau warrant records usually begin with the name on the warrant and the agency that asked for it. That may be enough for a quick public notice, but the court file often gives a fuller picture. Once you move from the list to the file, you may see the charge, the filing history, a docket trail, and the court order behind the warrant. That is the useful part of the search because it turns a name into a record you can read.

For people checking their own name, the best move is to use the official Juneau sources in order. Start with the JPD warrant page. Then check the courthouse if you need the case file. After that, compare the result to the state troopers list. That sequence keeps the search from drifting into rumor or third-party copies. It also keeps the record tied to the right office from the start.

Juneau warrant records can help with more than one question. They can tell you whether a name is still active, whether a case needs a clerk follow-up, and whether a state agency has a matching entry. They can also point you toward the right public office when the file is old or incomplete. In a small market like Juneau, that kind of detail saves time.

If the name on the list is yours, use the warrant notice and the court record as a guide, not as a reason to guess. Call JPD, speak with the clerk, or check the statewide list before you act. The record is public, but the next step should still come from the office that controls it.

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Juneau Warrant Records Follow Up

Juneau City and Borough warrant records are best handled through the JPD warrant notice, the Juneau Courthouse, and the Alaska State Troopers list. If you need the county page again, use the link below to return to this local record guide.

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