Search Stevens Point Police Records

Stevens Point Police Records are easier to use when you begin with the right office. The city Records Bureau handles request intake, the police page explains the department’s public tools, and the city clerk page shows where broader municipal records live. That gives Stevens Point a clear structure for people who need a report, a contact sheet, or a city file tied to a police matter. If you know whether the record belongs with the police bureau, the clerk, or a local campus office, the search moves faster and the answer is easier to trust.

Sponsored Results

Stevens Point Police Records Requests

The city records request page at Stevens Point Records Requests is the main path for Stevens Point Police Records. It places the Records Bureau at 933 Michigan Avenue in Stevens Point and says the desk is open 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 8:00 a.m. to noon on Friday, except holidays. That gives the city a simple, real-world records window instead of a vague contact page. If you need a report, a copy, or a follow-up on a pending file, that is the office the city wants you to use.

The same page also lays out the request costs. Incident and crash report copies are listed at one cent per page, and photocopies are also one cent per page. Photos, audio, and video on CD are listed at two dollars per disc. Shipping and handling vary by actual cost, and the mailing fee is waived if you provide a self-addressed stamped envelope. The page also says Wisconsin sales tax is added when applicable. Those details matter because Stevens Point Police Records are not just routed by office. They are also routed by format and by how the city must send the file back to you.

The page identifies Candy Tork as the legal custodian and Assistant Chief Jeremy Mueller as the deputy legal custodian. That is useful when you want to know who is accountable for the file, not just who answers the phone. For most requests, the city wants the requester to be specific, polite, and ready to provide enough detail for the bureau to find the correct report. Stevens Point Police Records move better when the request names the incident, the date, and the record type in plain terms.

Stevens Point Police Records and Contact Form

The online contact form at Contact the Records Bureau is a practical companion to the city records page. It asks for first and last name, street address, city, state, ZIP code, phone number, and email address, which means the bureau can follow up without guessing who sent the request. The form also gives the requester a text box to explain the question or comment. There is even an option to receive an email copy of the submission for the requester’s records.

That form is helpful when the request is too specific for a general city inbox and too modest for a mailed packet. It fits the way many Stevens Point Police Records requests actually work. Someone may know the date of an incident but not the report number. Another person may know the location and the officer response but not the exact file title. The contact form lets the bureau gather the missing pieces before the request becomes delayed or misfiled. It also gives the city a cleaner record of who asked for what and when.

For a city police file, that matters. The more directly the requester explains the event, the quicker the Records Bureau can decide whether the file is ready, whether it needs redaction, or whether it belongs with another office. Stevens Point Police Records are much easier to manage when the request begins with a simple note rather than a broad demand.

Stevens Point Police Records and Police Services

The city police page at Stevens Point Police is one of the strongest transparency pages connected to Stevens Point Police Records. The department says its sworn officers and staff serve people who live, work, and travel through the city. The page also links to the annual reports and budgets directory, the mission and values statement, the organizational chart, the policy manual, and the use of force policy. Those documents help the public understand how the department works before a request is even filed.

The same page also points to complaints and compliments, crime victim rights, crime victim compensation, criminal case status, WI-VINE, and online reporting. That tells you the department sees records as part of a wider public service system, not just as a stack of old reports. If you are trying to match a police event to a public process, those transparency tools are often the fastest place to start. Stevens Point Police Records are easier to interpret when you know whether the city is talking about a complaint, a crime victim resource, or a case-status page that sits beside the record itself.

The department page also links to the community resources side of policing. That includes crime stoppers, safe exchange services, school resource officer information, special needs alerts, Project Lifesaver, the community alert system, and a community survey. Those items do not replace records, but they explain the public setting in which records are created. In a city like Stevens Point, that broader context helps a researcher read a report more carefully and ask for the right file the first time.

Stevens Point Police Records and UWSP

The University of Wisconsin Stevens Point police page at UWSP Police and Security Services is the right local context for university-held records. The department is located at 1925 Maria Drive, Stevens Point, with a phone number of 715-346-3456 and fax 715-346-4908. The page also lists the email address protsv@uwsp.edu. Just as important, the research says the department’s jurisdiction is limited to property owned or controlled by UW Stevens Point. That means a campus record is not the same thing as a city patrol record.

The campus police page says its officers work closely with the Stevens Point Police Department, which is useful when a matter touches both the university and the city. That overlap can happen with events near campus, with safety complaints, or with police activity that begins on university property and later reaches city files. When that happens, Stevens Point Police Records can be split across two offices. The city records bureau handles the city file, while UWSP handles the campus file it created or kept.

The UWSP records request form at UWSP Police Records Request is the useful local supplement. It shows that the university keeps a formal route for police record requests, with separate instructions for release, copies, and juvenile material. I am not using the form as a replacement for the city bureau. I am using it because it confirms that campus police records are a separate records lane and that Stevens Point Police Records research should not collapse campus and city custody into one office.

Stevens Point Police Records and City Clerk

The city clerk page at Stevens Point City Clerk is the right support source when a request is not police-generated or when you need the city’s broader record structure. The clerk keeps the official records for the city, including agendas, bonds, contracts, election records, minutes, ordinances, and special assessments. That does not replace the Records Bureau, but it helps explain where a non-police city file belongs when a request starts at the wrong desk.

That distinction matters because not every local search is really a police search. A person may begin with Stevens Point Police Records because the issue involves a stop, a call, or a police response, but later realize the paper they need is a city ordinance, a council note, or an administrative record. When that happens, the clerk page becomes the better route. It is a simple but important boundary: police records belong with the Records Bureau, and city governance records belong with the clerk.

Using the clerk page also keeps the search grounded in the city structure. If the record is part of the municipal record set rather than the law-enforcement set, the clerk can help point the requester toward the right office. That saves time and keeps Stevens Point Police Records requests from drifting into a general city records search that does not fit the real file.

Stevens Point Police Records Images

The city routing portal at Stevens Point Police Records routing portal is the source for this city screenshot and should be treated as a routing clue only.

Stevens Point Police Records city routing portal screenshot

It shows where the city sends intake on the vendor side, but the Records Bureau pages remain the substantive source for the request rules.

The Portage County homepage at Portage County Police Records fallback page is the source for this county fallback image and provides nearby county context for Stevens Point records work.

Stevens Point Police Records county fallback screenshot

That visual cue is useful because Stevens Point sits within Portage County and sometimes shares records context with county offices.

Stevens Point Police Records Help

If you need a city police report, begin with the Records Bureau page or the contact form. If you need a city public record that is not police-generated, use the clerk page. If the matter belongs to UWSP police, use the university page and the campus records form. That keeps Stevens Point Police Records in the correct lane from the start and reduces back-and-forth with the wrong office.

The city gives you enough structure to make a smart request. The police page supplies transparency tools and department context. The records page gives you the bureau location, hours, and fees. The contact form captures the details needed for follow-up. The clerk page handles broader city records. The university page covers campus-held files. Put together, those pages make Stevens Point Police Records much easier to search and much easier to understand.

Sponsored Results