Door County 72 Hour Booking

Door County 72 Hour Booking records are useful when you need to check a recent arrest, confirm who is in custody, or move from a jail intake to the court file. The sheriff's office, the clerk of courts, and the state records tools each hold a different part of the trail. If you start with the local jail and then move to the public court portal, you can usually get from a booking note to a real case entry without a lot of guesswork. That makes the county search steadier and easier to trust.

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Door County Overview

1201 S Duluth Sheriff Office
1203 S Duluth Jail Admin Office
CCAP Court Search Tool
DOC State Custody Search

Door County Jail Records

Door County jail records are managed through the sheriff's office and the jail administrator. Lieutenant Kyle Veeser can be reached at (920) 746-5660 or kveeser@co.door.wi.us, which helps if you need current custody information or want to confirm where a person is being held. The jail side is the quickest source when a booking is still fresh.

The county court page at Door County courts says public access is available during business hours. That is the place to go when you need the case file or a copy after the booking. The jail tells you who is held now. The clerk tells you what the court has done with the case.

Door County's record structure is simple, but it is easy to use the wrong office first. A quick jail check can save time, especially when the public docket has not yet caught up. Then you can move to the clerk for the file copy once you know the case number or hearing date.

Door County 72 Hour Booking Process

Door County booking records start at the sheriff's office and the jail administrator. The sheriff office is at 1201 S Duluth Ave, and the jail administrator works from 1203 S Duluth Ave. That setup means the county has both the agency contact and the jail contact close together, which can make a fresh custody check easier to handle.

Once a booking shows up, the next step is usually the court portal. Wisconsin Circuit Court Access is the public view, and it can tell you whether the case has already been filed and what kind of case number you need for a request. That is helpful when you want the court side to match the jail side without waiting for the clerk to call back.

If the person later appears in the state system, the Wisconsin DOC Offender Locator gives the custody layer that county jail records cannot. It can show whether the person is in prison, on supervision, or discharged. That makes it a strong follow-up when a Door County booking has moved on.

Door County 72 Hour Booking Images

Door County does not have a non-flagged local image in the manifest, so the fallback below uses an official state image. The source link is Wisconsin DOC Offender Locator.

Door County 72 Hour Booking image using a Wisconsin state offender locator reference

That keeps the page tied to an official source while the county search stays focused on Door County jail and court records.

Door County 72 Hour Booking Records

The Door County Clerk of Courts maintains court records, and public access is available during business hours. That makes the clerk the place to go when a booking becomes a case file or when you need a copy for another office. It is also the cleanest way to get a paper trail after a jail search.

Wisconsin's public records law at Wis. Stat. § 19.31 supports public access to government records, while Wis. Stat. § 19.35 explains how direct copy costs can be charged. Those rules sit behind sheriff and clerk requests alike.

For a broader custody view, Wisconsin DOC and Wisconsin VINE are useful when a person moves, transfers, or is released. The Wisconsin State Law Library is also a good plain-language guide when you want to understand the steps after arrest and booking.

Door County works best when you treat the booking as the first record and the court file as the follow-up. The county jail confirms the immediate custody point. The clerk confirms the filed case. The state systems help you see whether the person moved into DOC custody. That layered search gives you a more complete result.

If you need a copy, the clerk can give you the public court file during business hours. That keeps the process local and predictable. It also helps you get the right document instead of relying on a summary that only shows part of the story.

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