Search Dunn County Police Blotter

Dunn County Police Blotter searches usually start with the sheriff's business office in Menomonie. That is the cleanest path when you want a report, a crash file, or a simple incident note tied to a county call. Dunn County keeps the records route direct, but the right desk still matters. If you know the date, street, or agency, you can move faster and avoid a back and forth that adds time. This page brings the main Dunn County sources together so you can start with the office that actually holds the record.

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615 Stokke Pkwy Sheriff Office
(715) 232-1564 Business Office
10 Business Days Standard Timing
LexisNexis Crash Reports

Dunn County Police Blotter Sources

The sheriff's main site at dunncountysheriff.com is the first county source worth checking. It gives you the office name, the base contact path, and the broader service pages that help sort out which record belongs with the sheriff. Dunn County's address is 615 Stokke Parkway, Menomonie, WI 54751, and the business office line is (715) 232-1564. That is the number to use when you want to get the request into the right hands on the first try.

The support services page at dunncountysheriff.com/support-services is the better route when you are hunting for records rules, crash report guidance, or the county's online report path. Dunn County says police reports are issued only by business office staff, not by deputies, so the request has to go through the office that actually manages release. That detail matters. It keeps a caller from asking the wrong person for a file that cannot be handed over from the field.

The sheriff's home page at dunncountysheriff.com shows the main county source for a Dunn County Police Blotter search.

Dunn County Police Blotter at the Dunn County Sheriff's Office

The office and the phone number belong in your notes, because the business office is the place that issues reports.

The support services page at dunncountysheriff.com/support-services is where Dunn County points people for records help and crash report access.

Dunn County Police Blotter support services page

That page is useful when a simple blotter note turns into a crash file or a longer records request.

Dunn County Records Requests

Dunn County handles records by phone or mail, and the county asks requesters to send mail to ATTN Records at 615 Stokke Parkway, Menomonie, WI 54751. The standard processing time is about 10 business days. That is a helpful rule of thumb, but it still pays to make the request tight. A short, clear ask gives the records desk the best shot at finding the right incident report, the right crash file, or the right public record without delay.

The sheriff business office line at (715) 232-1564 is the best starting point when you need to confirm how the office wants the request framed. If you also need court records, the Dunn County Clerk of Courts can be reached at (715) 232-1673. A police blotter item may not be the same thing as the court file, so it helps to keep those two tracks separate. One is the report. The other is what the court did with it.

When you ask for a Dunn County Police Blotter record, include as much of this as you can:

  • Exact date or date range
  • Street name or location
  • Names of the people involved, if known
  • Report number or crash number, if you have it
  • Whether you want an incident report or a crash report

One clean request is better than a stack of loose ones. It keeps the office from guessing what you mean and helps the file move through the queue more smoothly.

Note: Dunn County says the business office issues police reports, so a request sent to the wrong desk can add avoidable time.

Dunn County Police Blotter and Courts

Once a blotter item turns into a case, the court trail matters just as much as the police note. The Wisconsin Circuit Court Access system at wcca.wicourts.gov lets you look up case data by name or case number. That is often the fastest way to see whether a Dunn County Police Blotter item became a charge, a hearing, or a later result. The Wisconsin Court System at wicourts.gov gives the broader court framework behind that search.

The Dunn County Clerk of Courts at (715) 232-1673 can help when you need the local court desk instead of the statewide search. That office keeps the court side of the file moving, and it often knows more about filing status than a police report can show. The Wisconsin State Law Library county guide at wilawlibrary.gov/topics/county.php is also useful when you want the right county contact fast and do not want to guess which office owns the next step.

For state record checks that are separate from a blotter search, the Wisconsin Online Record Check System at recordcheck.doj.wi.gov gives another path. It is not a police report, but it can help when you need a Wisconsin criminal history check through the DOJ. The key is to keep each tool in its lane. The court file, the police record, and the record check each answer a different question.

Note: A court docket can confirm what happened after the report, but it will not replace the original Dunn County Police Blotter entry.

Dunn County Crash Reports and Open Records

Dunn County crash reports are handled differently from ordinary incident reports. The support services page points users to the LexisNexis portal on the sheriff site, which is the online route for accident files. If the event was a crash, start there first. It can save time and keep you from waiting on a paper request when the county already routes that type of file through a separate system.

The statewide crash report site at app.wi.gov/crashreports is a useful backup when you want the state lane for a road incident. That can help if the blotter note mentions a collision but you need the later crash record instead of the initial call. The Wisconsin Department of Justice Office of Open Government at doj.state.wi.us/office-open-government and its resource page at doj.state.wi.us/office-open-government/office-open-government-resources also give plain language help on how public records law works across Wisconsin.

Wisconsin's open records law is built on Chapter 19, and the text at docs.legis.wisconsin.gov/statutes/statute/19 is the basic legal frame. Wis. Stat. 19.31 favors access. Wis. Stat. 19.35 covers inspection and fees. Wis. Stat. 19.36 covers limits. Wis. Stat. 19.37 covers enforcement. Those sections matter in Dunn County too. They are why a blotter record is usually open, even if some names, images, or notes are later redacted.

The Wisconsin Supreme Court case at law.justia.com/cases/wisconsin/supreme-court/1979/76-724-7.html is one of the reasons police blotter information stays public in Wisconsin. It helped confirm that daily arrest list material belongs in the open record tradition. Dunn County follows that same state rule set, even when the final file needs some lines cut back for privacy or safety.

Search Dunn County Police Blotter

If you still need to narrow a Dunn County Police Blotter search, work from the facts you know. Start with the date, then the place, then the office. That order helps you sort a sheriff call from a court case or a crash file. It also keeps you from asking for a record that lives in the wrong folder. The county's records path is simple once the office is right, but it is easy to waste time if you start too broad.

Use the sheriff site, the support services page, and the court tools together when the file is not obvious. If the incident ended in court, check WCCA. If it was a crash, check the crash portal. If it was a general police report, send the request to the business office and wait for the standard review cycle. A clean search with a clear source is the best way to get a Dunn County record without extra back and forth.

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