Search Beaver County Police Records

Beaver County Police Records start with the Beaver County Sheriff's Office, which keeps the main public paths for records, dispatch, corrections, and civil service. People looking for bookings, arrests, inmate details, or a GRAMA request can begin on the county site and move to the right unit without having to guess which office handles the file. The sheriff's site also points to the records division, the form center, and the public tools used for common request types. If you need a name, a report, or a copy, Beaver County gives you a direct place to start.

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Beaver County Quick Facts

Records Division
Dispatch Emergency Line
GRAMA Request Form
Jail Corrections

Beaver County Police Records Contacts

The Beaver County Sheriff's Office home page at beaverutahsheriff.com lays out the main sheriff services in one place. That matters when you are trying to find Beaver County Police Records quickly. The site points to Sheriff, Corrections, Records, Patrol, Dispatch, and Animal Control, so you can narrow the path before you make a call or drive to the office.

The same page also highlights common public tools such as Bookings and Arrests, Submit a Tip, Inmate Services, the 5th District Court, Fingerprint Services, and Neighborhood Watch. Those links do not replace a records request, but they help you tell which unit may already have the information you need. Online payment is also available on the county site, which can matter when a request or service requires a fee.

For local contact details, the records division is reached at (435) 438-2467. The office is at 2270 South Sheriff Dale E. Nelson Drive, Beaver, UT 84713, with a mailing address of P.O. Box 391, Beaver, UT 84713. Those details give you a clean starting point for Beaver County Police Records if you need to ask about a report, a copy, or the next step in the process.

The sheriff site is useful because it keeps the county's public contact paths together. That saves time. It also keeps you inside the Beaver County system instead of sending you to a third-party search page with no clear county contact.

The Beaver County sheriff home page is shown below so you can see the county's main public safety menu before you file a request.

Beaver County police records sheriff office homepage

The Beaver County sheriff home page gives you the main menu before you ever make a request. That makes it easier to choose the right office for the record you want.

Sheriff Site beaverutahsheriff.com
Records Division (435) 438-2467
Physical Address 2270 South Sheriff Dale E. Nelson Drive, Beaver, UT 84713
Mailing Address P.O. Box 391, Beaver, UT 84713

Beaver County Police Records Requests

Beaver County Police Records requests often begin at the form center. The county's CivicEngage form page includes a GRAMA Request Form, a witness statement form, and contact forms for dispatch, corrections, search and rescue, and the sheriff's office. That makes the form center a practical first stop when you do not yet know which unit owns the file.

When a record is not posted online, a written request is usually the next move. The form center gives you a way to send the request through the county's own system, which is better than guessing at an email address or calling the wrong desk. If you are asking for a report, a booking detail, or a copy of a public file, keep your request plain and specific. Give names, dates, locations, and any case numbers you already have.

You can use the county forms page in a few different ways.

  • Open the GRAMA Request Form for a public records request.
  • Use the witness statement form when the county asks for it.
  • Use the dispatch or corrections contact forms for the right unit.
  • Save your request details so you can follow up later.

The Beaver County form center at beaverutahsheriff.com/FormCenter/Search?formID=49&categoryID=7&categoryFilter=7 gives you a simple path, and that is often the fastest way to get a response. If a record needs review, the county can route it through the right office instead of making you restart the search.

The Beaver County form center is shown below because it includes the GRAMA request form and other sheriff office request tools.

Beaver County police records form center and GRAMA request page

The Beaver County form center is the county's cleanest entry point for a GRAMA request. It also shows the sheriff office forms that sit next to records work.

Note: The form center keeps the process local, which helps when you need Beaver County Police Records and do not want to sort through outside sites first.

Dispatch and Jail Details

Dispatch is part of the record trail in Beaver County, especially when a call led to an incident, a stop, or an arrest. The county dispatch page at beaverutahsheriff.com/406/Dispatch explains that dispatch is the public's first outreach in an emergency. It supports unincorporated areas and contracted cities, and it also supplies NCIC information to officers. The listed phone number is (435) 438-2862, with fax (435) 438-5184 and emergency service through 911.

That matters because a records request often starts with the call that created the file. If you know the date, time, or location of an event, dispatch details can help you describe the request in a way the county can actually search. The dispatch page also shows that the office is built around emergency communications, so it is a useful reference when you need context for a report rather than just a case number.

The Beaver County dispatch page is shown below because it gives the direct emergency communications contact path.

Beaver County police records dispatch and emergency communications page

The Beaver County dispatch page shows where emergency calls and first response information begin. That can help you connect a police record to the call that created it.

The county corrections page at beaverutahsheriff.com/408/Corrections gives jail contact details and inmate money instructions. The jail phone is (435) 438-6497, and the mailing address is Beaver County Correctional Facility, Attn: Inmate Accounting, P.O. Box 391, Beaver, UT 84713. Those details are useful when a record request touches custody status, booking, or inmate services.

The corrections page also notes that money orders or cashier's checks can be mailed to the inmate trust fund, while cash, personal checks, and money orders made out to the inmate are not accepted. That is not a records rule, but it shows how the county keeps jail business organized. If your Beaver County Police Records search involves someone who was held in custody, the corrections page gives the right phone numbers and mailing path.

Dispatch (435) 438-2862
Dispatch Fax (435) 438-5184
Emergency 911
Jail Phone (435) 438-6497

Beaver County Police Records and Civil Process

The civil division at beaverutahsheriff.gov/499/Civil-Divison is not a records desk, but it is still part of the sheriff's public work. The page explains that the office serves many kinds of process for criminal and civil matters and cannot give legal advice or forms. It also says fees are charged under Utah law and payment must come first before service in most cases.

That same page is important because it shows how sheriff duties reach beyond traffic stops and arrests. The office can serve documents by email after payment, by mail, or in person at 2270 South Sheriff Dale E. Nelson Drive, Beaver, UT 84713. Protective orders and stalking injunctions are served at no cost by any law enforcement officer, which makes the civil division a meaningful part of the local public safety record trail.

Beaver County Police Records are easier to understand when you see how the sheriff's office is organized. Records, dispatch, corrections, and civil service all touch the same public safety system. If you are trying to trace a report from start to finish, that structure helps. It tells you where the file began, where it moved, and which office can answer the next question.

The Beaver County records division page at beaverutahsheriff.com/410/Records keeps the records work tied to local service. That is better than using a generic public record page that does not know the Beaver County office layout. The county has already grouped its public tools by unit, which makes the search less confusing.

The Beaver County records division page is shown below because it gives the direct records office contact details.

Beaver County police records division contact page

The Beaver County records division page gives the direct phone number and street address for records questions. It is the best county contact when you need a public file or a copy.

Note: The county sheriff site ties the records unit to the rest of the office, so one request can often be routed without bouncing you between departments.

What Beaver County Police Records Show

The Beaver County Sheriff's Office menu gives a good clue about the kinds of records people ask for most often. Bookings and arrests are listed on the main site, along with inmate services, fingerprint services, and neighborhood watch. Those labels show where the county expects the public to look when they need police records or related information. If you need a starting point for a name search, the sheriff site is the right first stop.

County police records can also connect to a court file or a civil service event. A report may point to the 5th District Court, while a civil process file may show how a document was served. That is why it helps to keep the date, place, and person names together when you ask for a record. Short requests get short answers. Clear requests get better results.

When you know the basic record type, the county can narrow the search faster.

  • Booking or arrest record
  • Dispatch or call reference
  • Inmate or custody detail
  • GRAMA request response
  • Civil process service record

That list is not a full index. It is a practical map of the Beaver County Police Records trail. The county site already groups the most useful paths, and that makes it easier to match your question to the right office.

State Help for Beaver County Police Records

If Beaver County cannot give you everything you need, Utah state resources fill in the gaps. The GRAMA law at Utah Code 63G-2 explains how access and privacy are balanced in public records. The Utah Courts site at utcourts.gov is useful when a police record connects to a court file, and the Utah State Archives can help with older material that has moved out of the county office.

The state BCI page at bci.utah.gov/criminal-records/ is the place to look when you need your own Utah criminal history or a record challenge path. If a case has already been expunged or is being reviewed, the expungement page at bci.utah.gov/expungements/ can be helpful. Those state tools do not replace Beaver County Police Records, but they do explain where a county file may end up later.

That wider view matters. Some records stay local. Some move to the state. Some are limited by law and some are open once the case is done. When you work through Beaver County Police Records, start local, then use the Utah state tools if you need a broader search or a status check.

Beaver County keeps the process practical. The sheriff office, records division, form center, and dispatch page all point in the same direction. If you use the county pages first and the state pages second, you usually get the clearest path.

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