Lake Stevens 72 Hour Booking Lookup

Lake Stevens 72 hour booking records track recent arrests made by the Lake Stevens Police Department. Most folks held by city officers get moved to the Snohomish County Jail in Everett within hours. The county runs the public jail roster, so that is the main place to look. You can also call the Lake Stevens Police Records unit for local incident details. This page shows you where to search, what shows up on a booking record, and how to file a public records request the right way.

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Lake Stevens Booking Records Overview

36K+ Population
Snohomish County
72 Hr Hold Window
Public Roster

Where Lake Stevens Booking Records Live

The Lake Stevens Police Department books arrestees and then transfers them to the Snohomish County Jail. The city does not run its own long-term jail. That means the booking record shows up on the county system, not on a city page. The Snohomish County Sheriff's Office posts a public jail roster online with names, charges, booking time, and bail. You can search by last name. Most new bookings appear on the roster within a few hours of being processed.

For the local police side, contact the Lake Stevens Police Records unit at 1825 S. Lake Stevens Road. Call (425) 334-9537. They handle the incident reports, arrest reports, and any other paperwork the officer wrote up at the scene. Records staff process written PRA requests in about five business days. You can drop off the request in person or mail it in.

Some folks need both sides. The city has the report. The county has the booking. You may have to file with both to get a full picture. Note: Lake Stevens Police are sworn officers, but custody for anything past the initial booking moves to the county jail in Everett.

How to Search Lake Stevens 72 Hour Booking Online

Start with the Snohomish County Jail roster. The Sheriff's Office hosts an online in-custody list that you can browse from any web browser. Type a last name and hit search. The roster will show recent bookings, charges filed, the agency that brought the person in, and bail or bond amounts. Lake Stevens cases will list the city police as the arresting agency. Court dates show up after the first appearance.

You can also pull court info from the Washington Courts public portal at courts.wa.gov. The state runs a search for district and superior court cases. Felony cases out of Lake Stevens go to Snohomish County Superior Court. Misdemeanors filed by the city prosecutor go to Lake Stevens Municipal Court. The state Odyssey portal at odysseyportal.courts.wa.gov covers many courts as well.

Lake Stevens Police uses the local website at lakestevenswa.gov for general info. You will find phone numbers, the records request form, and contact details for the chief's office. The site also lists how to ask for body camera footage when one is needed.

The Washington State Patrol keeps a separate criminal history database. Visit wsp.wa.gov to run a WATCH name check. That gives you a statewide rap sheet, not just Lake Stevens activity. There is a small fee. The system pulls from convictions reported by all police agencies in the state.

The Lake Stevens Police Department keeps the local incident files at its main station. We linked to the city page so you can see how they describe their records process. Visit the official Lake Stevens city website for the latest contact details.

Lake Stevens 72 Hour Booking police department page

Use the city site to find the records request form before you call. That saves time at the front counter.

What Shows on a Booking Record

A 72 hour booking record from Snohomish County is short but useful. It is a snapshot of who was just brought in. You will see the arrestee's full name, date of birth, the booking date and time, charges, and the holding facility. Most records also show bail, the case number, and the agency that made the arrest. Mug shots are not always public on the roster page itself, but the Sheriff keeps them on file.

Charges shown on the roster are not the same as a conviction. They are what the officer wrote down at the time of the arrest. The prosecutor may add, drop, or change them later. A person listed on the roster has not been found guilty. They are waiting on a first court date or pretrial steps.

Note: Booking records get updated all day, so a person can show up on the list at noon and be released by dinner. Always check the roster again if the case is moving fast.

Public Records Requests in Lake Stevens

Washington law gives the public a right to see most jail and police records. The Public Records Act under RCW 42.56 lays out the rules. You can ask for nearly any record that is not exempt. The agency has five business days to respond. They may need more time for a big request. They will give you an estimate.

For Lake Stevens, send your PRA to the police records unit at 1825 S. Lake Stevens Road. Put your name, contact info, and the records you want in writing. Be clear and short. List the report number if you have it. List the names, dates, and types of records if you do not. The clerk will tell you the cost for copies before they pull the file.

Jail records from the county fall under RCW 70.48.100, which sets out what jail records can be released. Some items are sealed, like juvenile bookings and some medical info. Criminal history disclosures follow RCW 10.97, the Criminal Records Privacy Act.

Fees and Copy Costs

Lake Stevens Police charges modest fees for copies. Plain paper copies run a few cents per page. Larger requests with audio or video cost more because of the media. Fees are listed in the city's records policy. The Snohomish County Sheriff has its own fee schedule. The first 30 minutes of staff time are usually free under state rules.

Note: Ask for an estimate up front for any request that may take more than an hour of staff work, since you can narrow it down before they start.

Related Lake Stevens Records Resources

If the person was sentenced to state prison, the Washington Department of Corrections runs a public search at doc.wa.gov. That covers anyone in DOC custody. For active warrants, the DOC also lists warrant data. The Washington Association of Sheriffs and Police Chiefs runs the JBRS jail booking system, which feeds data from county jails statewide.

The state courts also run Find My Court Date, a quick way to look up upcoming hearings. The Municipal Research and Services Center at mrsc.org has a guide for public records law in Washington. For federal cases out of Western District court, use PACER. Statutes that drive how police can hold someone before a charging decision come from RCW 4.24.550 and the sheriff disclosure rules under RCW 36.28A.040.

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Snohomish County Booking Information

Lake Stevens sits in Snohomish County. All long-term holds and the public jail roster are run by the county. Visit the county page for full details on the Sheriff's jail, fees, search systems, and visiting rules.

View Snohomish County 72 Hour Booking

Nearby Cities

Other Snohomish County cities use the same county jail. Pick a city to view its booking records page.