Edmonds Recent Arrests

Edmonds Recent Arrests are usually handled through the police records unit and the city's records request form. If you need a police report, a request copy, or a record tied to a city incident, Edmonds gives you a direct local path. The records unit has a named supervisor, a fillable form, and multiple submission methods, so the city is set up for people who already know what record they want. That makes Edmonds a practical place to begin when the matter is local to the city rather than a county jail or state system.

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250 5th Ave NPolice Address
5 DaysResponse Window
Shane HawleyRecords Supervisor
RCW 42.56Records Rule

The main city source is the Edmonds Police Department records page. The research says the department sits at 250 5th Ave N., Edmonds, WA 98020, with a main phone number of 425-771-0200 and a fax at 425-771-0208. The records unit is supervised by Sergeant Shane Hawley, and the unit has a direct phone number at 425-771-0284. That makes the city page a real access point rather than a generic contact sheet.

Edmonds does not have an approved non-flagged image in the local city set, so the page should lean on the city records details and, where needed, state or county support. The city records page says the records request form is fillable and printable, and requests can be mailed, faxed, or delivered in person. That gives you a simple record path when the arrest or incident is local to Edmonds.

The city also provides a records email at shane.hawley@edmondswa.gov and a police records email at police.records@edmondswa.gov. Those contact points matter when the request is specific and you want to reach the records unit directly. The city page is the best starting point for a local police record search.

Edmonds Police Records

The Edmonds police records page is the core local resource. It says requests can be mailed, faxed, or delivered in person, and that a fillable and printable PDF is available. That is the kind of record setup that fits a focused city request. It also means the request can be as simple or as formal as the record requires. If notarization or a more complete step is needed, the city gives you a path to follow.

Because the city records research is narrower than a full jail roster system, it helps to keep the search focused. The city page gives you the address, the phone numbers, the supervisor, and the email contacts. Those are the details that matter when the record is local. If you need broader support, Washington State Courts is the next place to check, and RCW 42.56 still controls the public records rule.

For a record that may have moved beyond city control, DOC Incarcerated Search and WA VINE can help. Those are backup tools, though. For a city arrest record, Edmonds police records is the right first stop.

Edmonds Recent Arrests and Public Access

Edmonds Recent Arrests are governed by the Washington Public Records Act, which means the city must respond within five business days in some form. The research also says exemptions apply under RCW 42.56. That means the city can deny or limit a record if a legal exemption applies, but it still has to process the request. That is the most important timing rule for a city police request.

The city records page does not mention a jail roster or a separate city custody system, so the city records unit is the central access point. If the request becomes broader than a city police record, the next step is often state courts or county-level support. That is where the county or state tools come in when a city records request is not enough to finish the search.

Washington's criminal history law in RCW 10.97 and the jail record rule in RCW 70.48.100 are useful state references if the record moves beyond the city police file. The city page still gives you the best local first step.

Edmonds Copy Timelines

Edmonds does not list a fee in the research section provided, but it does give you a clear records process and a five-business-day response window. The fillable form, email contacts, fax number, and in-person options all point to a city system that can handle direct request work. The most useful thing to know is that the city has a named records supervisor, which makes follow-up easier if you need to clarify a request.

If the record is a police matter and not a court file, the city route is the right one. If the record becomes a court issue, Washington State Courts is the next step. If custody or booking moved out of the city, then state tools may help. The city page itself is the center of the Edmonds search.

The city setup is straightforward. Use the form, use the contact details, and keep the request tied to the incident details you already know. That is the cleanest way to search Edmonds Recent Arrests.

Edmonds Recent Arrests searches work best when you keep the police records page, the records supervisor, and the state backup tools together. That gives you the local route first and the broader record path second.

These links cover the main route.

If the city record is not enough, Washington Courts and DOC search can continue the trail.

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Related Edmonds Records

Edmonds Recent Arrests work is easiest when you keep the police records unit and the city request form together. That is the city's main access path.

If the record moves beyond the city, DOC search and state courts are the next sensible checks.