Search Clark County Felony Records

Clark County Felony Records are handled through the circuit court clerk and surfaced through the statewide WCCA portal. That gives you a quick first look, then a local office for the official file. The clerk's mission is to preserve the written record of circuit court proceedings, so the county keeps the record side serious and direct. If you know a party name, case number, or filing year, you can move from public search to official copy without much guesswork. The county pages and the state portal fit together well.

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Clark County Felony Records Search

Use Wisconsin Circuit Court Access first. Clark County court records are public through the statewide system, and basic case information is free. That makes WCCA the easiest way to confirm a felony file before you contact the clerk office. The system can show the public summary, case status, and other entries that were entered into the circuit court record by county staff.

The clerk page says the office does not give legal advice. That is normal, and it keeps the office focused on the record. It also manages collections, financial management, records management, enforcement of court-ordered obligations, and jury management. Those duties show why the clerk is the right place to ask when a public search becomes a real file request. If you want to sort out the county path before you call, the Wisconsin Court System also has a general case search page that keeps you on the official state route.

Felony records in Wisconsin are kept for 50 years, and Class A felonies for 75 years. That long retention period is helpful when a Clark County file is old but still part of the public record. A short online summary does not mean the record is gone. It usually means you need the local clerk to pull the file or confirm the older entry.

Lead image source: the county clerk page at Clark County Clerk of Courts shows the office that preserves the circuit court record and handles public case requests.

Clark County felony records court records

That office is the county gatekeeper for felony record searches, copies, and questions about the written court record.

Clark County Clerk Records

The Clark County Clerk of Courts keeps the written record of circuit court proceedings and is tasked with prompt and efficient service. The office handles appeals, civil, criminal, family, forfeitures, incarcerated persons, small claims, and traffic matters. That wide range matters because a felony search can sit inside a larger case history. The clerk office is the county source of truth for the record itself.

The office is at 517 Court Street, Room 405, Neillsville, WI 54456, and the phone is (715) 743-5181. The county law library page backs that contact path and points to the sheriff as well. That is useful because it keeps the county record map tight. You do not have to guess which office manages what. The clerk keeps the file. The sheriff handles arrest-side material.

Lead image source: the county clerk page at Clark County Clerk of Courts also shows the clerk office that anchors the local file request path.

Clark County felony records clerk of courts

That image fits the clerk section because it points to the office that preserves the written court record and answers the county-side request.

For a public records rule, Wisconsin law still starts with Wis. Stat. 19.35. That statute supports inspection and copying unless another law limits access. In Clark County, that means the clerk can tell you whether a file is public and where to find it, but you still have to use the local record office for the actual copy. If you need a form path, the Wisconsin courts also keep a Circuit Court forms page that fits the county process.

Clark County keeps the process orderly. The clerk handles records and obligations. The state portal gives you the public summary. The county page gives you the office detail. That is enough to move from a name search to a real record request without wandering.

Lead image source: the county law directory at Wisconsin State Law Library Clark County Resources ties the clerk, sheriff, and court support pieces together.

Clark County felony records legal resources

That directory is the best county map when you want the right office before you step into the courthouse process.

Clark County Felony Records Copies

When a Clark County search turns into a copy request, the clerk office is still the office that matters. The clerk manages records management and collections, so the office is built to move a record from the court file to the public request side. If you are calling ahead, have your case number ready. The county itself says that keeping the case number handy helps staff identify the file.

The county record page is direct about the office role: preserve the record, serve the public, and avoid legal advice. That is exactly what you want in a records request office. The staff can help you find the file, but they are not there to tell you what to do next in court. For that reason, the record request should stay focused on the case name, filing year, and number if you have it.

Clark County Felony Records are easiest to handle in layers. WCCA gives you the public summary. The clerk gives you the official file. If you need a statewide context before you call, the state case search page is a clean fallback. When the record is older, the county office remains the place that can tell you whether the file is still on site or needs a different pull.

Note: Clark County clerk staff can explain the record process, but they cannot give legal advice or choose the strategy for your case.

Lead image source: the county sheriff page at Clark County Sheriff Office shows the county office that handles arrest records and jail information.

Clark County felony records sheriff office

That image fits the arrest-side record trail and pairs with the clerk side when you need the full county picture.

Clark County Felony Records Requests

If the court file is not enough, Clark County sheriff records can fill in the arrest and jail side of the story. The sheriff office maintains arrest records and operates the county jail. That makes it a useful second stop when a felony case shows up online but the law enforcement start is still unclear. The county law library page confirms that the sheriff is part of the local legal resource map.

Use the sheriff page when you need arrest-side information. Use the clerk page when you need the circuit court record. Use WCCA when you want the public summary first. That order keeps the process simple. It also avoids a lot of backtracking because you know which office owns which part of the record trail.

The state law library page for Clark County is helpful here too. It points you back to the clerk and sheriff offices in one place, which is useful if you are trying to compare contact paths before a visit. If you only need to confirm that the case is public, WCCA is usually enough. If you need a copy, the clerk office is the one to call.

Clark County also makes it clear that the clerk cannot provide legal advice. That means the request should stay focused on records, not strategy. Bring the exact name, the date range, and the case number if possible. That is the most direct route through the county system.

Clark County Felony Records Access

Clark County Felony Records are easiest to manage when you keep the three official sources in mind. WCCA gives you the free public summary. The clerk gives you the file and the office detail. The sheriff gives you the arrest and jail side. Together, those sources cover the whole record path without relying on low-quality copy sites or guesswork.

The county pages also make the tone of the process clear. Prompt and efficient service matters, but the clerk will not give legal advice. That is a useful boundary. It keeps the office focused on records and leaves legal interpretation to the right professionals. If you are asking for a copy, the request should be precise. If you are only checking whether the case exists, the public portal is enough.

For broader record access, Wisconsin open records law at Wis. Stat. 19.35 still frames the public right to inspect records. In practice, Clark County applies that rule through the clerk office and the court portal. That is why the cleanest route starts online and ends at the county office only if you need the official copy.

Note: Clark County is easiest to search when you begin with WCCA and only move to the clerk or sheriff after you know which record you need.

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