Search Petersburg Borough Warrant Records
Petersburg Borough warrant records help you check active warrants, confirm which court or police office has the file, and see what records still need follow-up. Start with the Petersburg Police Department at 14 South Nordic Drive or the Petersburg Court at 17 South Nordic Drive if you want the local path first. Then use the Alaska Court System portal and the Department of Public Safety warrant tools when you need a wider search. That keeps the record tied to the office that issued or holds it. If the name is yours, verify the status through an official source before you take the next step.
Petersburg Warrant Records Overview
Petersburg Warrant Records Basics
Petersburg warrant records can show the full legal name, the date and time the warrant was issued, the case number, the alleged offense, the judicial officer, the bail amount, the execution conditions, the geographic limits, and the expiration date if one applies. That is the kind of detail that turns a simple warrant notice into a real record you can read and compare.
The research notes that Alaska Court Rules treat active warrants as serious matters and that people with active warrants may be subject to immediate arrest. It also points to Alaska Rules of Criminal Procedure Rule 37 as a guide to the contents of a warrant record. Those details matter because the record is not just a name. It is part of a court file with a date, an order, and a path through the system.
Petersburg warrant searches work best when you keep the record close to the issuing office. A police department may confirm status. The court can show the file. The statewide troopers list can show whether the name appears in a broader public check. When those sources agree, you have a much cleaner read on the record.
Note: Petersburg warrant records can move fast, so the best answer is always the one confirmed by the court or the police office that handles the file.
Petersburg Warrant Records at Court
The Petersburg Court is at 17 South Nordic Drive, Petersburg, AK 99833, and the phone number is (907) 772-3824. That office handles criminal and civil cases, including warrant issuances for Petersburg Borough. It is the place to go when the warrant notice needs a docket entry, a case number, or a copy from the court file.
| Office | Petersburg Court |
|---|---|
| Address |
17 South Nordic Drive Petersburg, AK 99833 |
| Phone | (907) 772-3824 |
| Website | courts.alaska.gov |
The Alaska Court System trial courts page helps you confirm the right office, while records.courts.alaska.gov lets you search by name, case number, or ticket or citation number. That is the cleanest official route when you need to move from a warrant notice to the case file that sits behind it.
The Alaska Court System homepage also matters because it keeps the Petersburg search tied to the official state court structure. If you need to verify where to ask for copies or which office handles a public record, that is the place to begin. The search path is local, but the rules come from the state court system.
The state court image works here because Petersburg warrant records often move from a local notice to a statewide court search.
Note: Court counters can confirm the file, but the file itself is still the source that explains the warrant and the charge behind it.
How to Search Petersburg Warrant Records
The Petersburg Police Department is at 14 South Nordic Drive, Petersburg, AK 99833, and the phone number is (907) 772-3838. If you want a quick local check, start there. The department can help with warrant status questions and local follow-up. For a broader public check, use the Alaska Court System portal and the Alaska State Troopers warrant list.
When you contact the office, use the details that help staff find the right file. A full legal name is the best start. A case number is even better. If you know the date, offense, or issuing court, add that too. The more exact the search terms are, the easier it is to match the warrant to the right case.
- Full legal name and any spelling variant
- Case number, if you have it
- Approximate date or time of issuance
- Offense type or court location
After the local call or visit, compare the result with the Alaska State Troopers active warrant list. That list is updated daily and gives you a statewide snapshot. It is useful when you want a current check before you ask the court for the file or before you make a records request to the police department.
In person, the Petersburg Court and Petersburg Police Department are the two local offices that matter most. One can point you to the case record. The other can confirm the law enforcement side of the search. Together they give you a better read on the record than any reposted list or private summary can provide.
Petersburg State Warrant Records
The Department of Public Safety homepage at dps.alaska.gov is the parent site for the Alaska State Troopers and their warrant resources. It is the official state door to the search when Petersburg needs a broader record check or when the local office has only part of the answer.
The Alaska State Troopers active warrant list at hotsheets.dps.alaska.gov/AST/Warrants gives you the daily statewide list in CSV and PDF form. That is a practical tool for checking whether a name still appears and for comparing a local Petersburg record to a state record. The list does not replace the court file, but it does help you confirm current status.
When you need the court side of the search, the Alaska Court System trial courts page at courts.alaska.gov/trialcourts/ and the records portal at records.courts.alaska.gov are the key official sources. They are the best match for case information, copy requests, and the file that sits behind a warrant.
Tip: If you are not sure which office owns the record, start with the court portal and the troopers list, then call the local police department for a direct status check.
What Petersburg Warrant Records Show
Petersburg warrant records often show enough detail to let you trace the case from the warrant notice back to the court file. The main pieces are the name, the date and time of issuance, the charge or alleged offense, and the issuing judicial officer. Those pieces let you see who the warrant names and where the record came from.
The record can also show bail, the way the warrant should be executed, any geographic limits on enforcement, and whether the warrant has an expiration date. Those facts matter because they help you tell the difference between an active warrant and a record that has already been served, recalled, or otherwise changed.
A good Petersburg search should not stop at one office. Use the police department for local status, the court for the file, and the state list for a fresh comparison. That three-part approach is the most practical way to keep the search accurate and local.
A Petersburg warrant record may include:
- Full legal name
- Date and time issued
- Case number and court
- Alleged offense or charge
- Judicial officer
- Bail amount
- Execution conditions, geographic limits, or expiration date
Petersburg Warrant Records Follow Up
Petersburg Borough warrant records are best handled through the police department, the court, the Alaska Court System portal, and the Alaska State Troopers list. If you need the next step, use the office that matches the part of the record you are trying to confirm.
Bring the full legal name and any case detail you have. That keeps the request focused and helps the clerk or officer find the right record without guesswork.