Search St. Croix County Felony Records

St. Croix County Felony Records are easier to track when you start with the public court portal and then move to the clerk if you need the official file. That path keeps the search local and keeps the record in the right hands. The county has a clear office structure in Hudson, and the sheriff office can help when the arrest side matters. A case number is best. A name and date of birth also work. With those basics, the county record trail gets much simpler to follow.

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Lead image source: the county law library page at Wisconsin State Law Library St. Croix County Resources is the official county guide that points users toward St. Croix court and law-enforcement records.

St. Croix County felony records legal resources

That St. Croix County felony records image fits the local guide section because it connects the county page to the clerk and sheriff offices people use first.

St. Croix County Felony Records Clerk

The clerk of circuit court is the office that handles the official record. St. Croix County lists the office at the St. Croix Government Center, 1101 Carmichael Road, Hudson, WI 54016. The phone number is (715) 386-4630, and the email is clerkofcourts@sccwi.gov. That gives you a clear place to start when the public case view is not enough. The clerk also handles civil, criminal and traffic, family, juvenile, probate, and register in probate records. Felony work sits inside that broader court record system.

For copies, the county says civil, criminal and traffic, family, and juvenile divisions cost $1.25 per page, with certified copies adding $5 per document. Probate copies have their own fee schedule, but felony searches usually stay focused on the criminal file. That is the key point. You are not just asking for a printout. You are asking for the record the court uses.

If you are asking in person, bring the case number. If you do not have it, bring the last name, first name, and date of birth. The county says there is a $5 search fee if the staff cannot find the case using the public access computer. Probate searches have a $4 search fee, but the general felony path still uses the criminal file and the same basic identity clues. A clean request saves time for everyone.

Mail requests work too. St. Croix County asks for a written request with the case number or other identifying information, a self-addressed stamped envelope, and a phone number. That helps when you cannot make the trip to Hudson. It also keeps the request clear enough that staff can match the right file without back and forth. The office can also point you to the right branch if your request touches more than one case type.

Note: Bring a case number if you have one, because St. Croix County uses it to move the clerk search faster and avoid extra fees.

St. Croix County Sheriff Records

The sheriff office handles arrest records and the jail side of the record trail. That matters when St. Croix County Felony Records also need booking detail, custody history, or the arrest report that sits next to the court case. The clerk holds the court file. The sheriff holds the law-enforcement record. Keeping those roles separate makes the search easier and keeps each request pointed at the right office.

Use the official sheriff page at St. Croix County Sheriff's Office when the search needs arrest-side material. The county law library guide also names the sheriff office as part of the local record path, which is useful when you want an official route from start to finish. If the court result is thin, the sheriff office can still help you see whether the booking or jail part fills the gap. That gives you a clean public route while you stay inside county sources.

St. Croix County felony searches work best when you use WCCA first, then the clerk, then the sheriff if the arrest side matters. That order keeps the record trail official and easy to follow. It also helps when a case has both court and custody pieces. A short online summary does not mean the record is gone. It usually means you need the right office to finish the search. The county guide and the courthouse page are the two best local pointers.

St. Croix County Felony Records Requests

For a clean request, start with the case number and the name as it appears in court. If the case is older, add a filing year. If there are several results, use date of birth or a middle initial to narrow them. The county office can search the public access computer, and the online case view can help you confirm the docket before you pay for copies. Those small details keep the request tight and save time at the counter.

St. Croix County says court records can be viewed in the Clerk of Courts Office or at the Wisconsin Circuit Court website. That local and statewide mix is useful because it gives you two official places to check the same case. The court portal is the quick view. The clerk office is the source for the paper copy. If you need the file to show where the matter stands, that is the difference that matters. It keeps your search grounded in the right office.

Off-site records are usually available within 72 hours, so older files may not be on the counter right away. Emergency requests can be handled within 2 hours for $22.75 per trip. That is useful when time matters and the file is stored away from the main office. It is also the reason the clerk remains the best local contact before you plan a trip. If you need more than the public case summary, the clerk can tell you which path is fastest.

The county guide, the WCCA portal, the clerk office, and the sheriff office work together. One shows the public case data. One points to the right office. One holds the local file. One holds the arrest trail. That is the fastest way to move from a screen result to the county record itself without guessing which desk can help.

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