Search Juab County Police Records

Juab County Police Records can lead you to the sheriff's office, the jail desk, the county recorder, or the justice court depending on what you are trying to find. A booking note is not stored in the same place as a court file, and a property record is not the same as a jail record. That is why a focused search matters. Juab County keeps its public contact paths clear, so you can move from a name, date, or location to the right office without guessing at the next step.

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Juab County Quick Facts

Nephi County Seat
7 AM - 6 PM Office Hours
7 Days Remote Visits
GRAMA Court Record Requests

Juab County Police Records Office

The Juab County Sheriff's Office is the main local stop for Juab County Police Records. The office handles jail operations, patrol, investigations, and corrections, so it sits at the center of most law enforcement questions in the county. When you need to know where a report lives, where a booking note might be kept, or who can answer a custody question, the sheriff's office is the right place to begin.

The Juab County sheriff page gives the public office location, the phone numbers, and the weekday schedule. The office is at 425 West Sheeplane Drive, Nephi, UT 84648. The main phone is (435) 623-1344, the fax is (435) 623-7720, and the jail phone is (435) 623-1349. Office hours run Monday through Thursday from 7:00 AM to 6:00 PM. That makes it easy to confirm which desk should get your question before you make the drive.

Juab County also uses the sheriff office as the public point for both law enforcement and jail operations. That matters because a lot of county police records searches begin with a name but end in a question about custody, service, or a hearing. The sheriff's office is the one place that keeps those threads close together.

The Juab County sheriff page is shown below because it gives the county's main public safety contact path in one place.

Juab County police records sheriff office page

That page is the cleanest first stop when you need Juab County Police Records and want to stay inside the county's own contact system.

Office Juab County Sheriff's Office
Address 425 West Sheeplane Drive
Nephi, UT 84648
Main Phone (435) 623-1344
Jail Phone (435) 623-1349
Hours Monday through Thursday, 7:00 AM to 6:00 PM

Juab County Police Records Requests

Juab County does not present a large standalone records portal in the research, so the sheriff's office is the practical first stop for a police-records question. If you need a booking note, an arrest detail, or a report tied to a local event, start with the sheriff contact page and ask which office should handle the file. The office already groups jail operations, patrol, investigations, and corrections under one roof, so a direct request usually gets routed faster than a broad one.

For a request, keep the facts simple and specific. Give the name, the date, the location, and the kind of record you want. That helps the county decide whether it is looking for a jail note, a patrol record, or a court-side paper trail. A focused ask is easier to answer and easier to track if you have to follow up later.

Juab County's justice court also accepts GRAMA requests for court records. That matters when a police event turns into a case file or when you need the court side of the record trail. The court is at juabcounty.gov/justice-court, at 160 North Main Street, Nephi, UT 84648, with phone (435) 623-1141. The court says public terminals are available during business hours, and warrant checks can be done in person.

Juab County Police Records requests usually work best when the county can match the request to one of the following details:

  • The person or case name
  • The date or date range of the event
  • The office you think has the file
  • Any case or booking number you already know

That list is not a formal county form. It is the kind of detail that helps the sheriff office or the justice court find the right file without extra back and forth.

Note: Juab County police records are easier to trace when you know whether the file belongs to the sheriff, the jail, or the court before you send the request.

Juab County Police Records and Jail Access

The jail side of Juab County Police Records is important because the sheriff's office runs jail operations and corrections from the same county system. The jail phone is (435) 623-1349, and that direct line is useful if you want to confirm a booking, ask about custody, or check whether an inmate detail is available. The office also says remote visits are available seven days a week and on holidays, with time blocks in the morning, afternoon, and evening.

Juab County's visitation rules are straightforward. Visitors who are sixteen or older must show photo identification. That is a practical detail for families, attorneys, and anyone who needs to plan around a visit instead of a records request. If you only need to know whether someone is in custody, the jail contact is the right place to ask before you start hunting through a broader records search.

Jail records and booking notes are not the same thing as a court file. The jail side can tell you where a person is held, whether visits are allowed, and whether a recent booking exists. The court side is where the charges and hearing history show up. Keeping those two tracks separate saves time and keeps your search organized.

Juab County Police Records work best when you use the jail phone for custody questions and the sheriff contact page for everything else tied to the local law enforcement file. That keeps the request in the county's own hands instead of guessing at a county office that does not own the record.

Juab County Police Records and Court Files

Juab County's justice court is the main local court reference in the research, and it helps when a police record turns into a filed case. The justice court page says the Fourth District Court in Nephi handles civil, criminal, and family law cases. That gives you a clear place to look when an arrest, citation, or incident moves from the sheriff side to the court side.

The justice court also accepts GRAMA requests for court records and has public terminals during business hours. Those details matter if you need to search for a case on site or if you want to ask for a file tied to a criminal matter. A court record is often the next step after a police record, so knowing where the court sits keeps your search moving.

The justice court is the county's best court-side reference. It is at 160 North Main Street, Nephi, UT 84648, with the phone number (435) 623-1141. The page also notes that warrant checks are available in person, which can help when a police record search leads to a court question instead of a jail question.

That court access point is important because the public often needs the arrest file and the case file together. The police record tells you what started the matter. The court record tells you how Juab County handled it next.

Juab County Police Records and Recorder Files

The county recorder is not a police office, but it can still help when a police records search touches property, address history, or a document trail that crosses county offices. Juab County's recorder page at juabcounty.gov/recorder/ identifies Recorder Debra P. Zirbes and gives the public a place to work with property search, GIS mapping, Fraud Guard or Notify tools, and recorder standards. That makes it the right office for land records, map checks, and certified copies that may support a broader records search.

The recorder office is at 160 N Main Street, Office #110, Nephi, UT 84648, with phone 435-623-3430. Office hours are Monday through Thursday from 7:00 AM to 6:00 PM. Certified copies cost $5 plus $1 per page, copies cost $0.50 per page on site, and email documents cost $1 per page. Those fees are for recorder work, not police records, but they matter when a search overlaps with a property dispute or a public document request.

Juab County Police Records searches are often cleaner when you know which office owns which part of the trail. The recorder keeps land and document tools. The sheriff keeps law enforcement records. The justice court keeps the case file. That split is simple, but it saves a lot of time.

If your record search touches a house, a parcel, or a mapped address, the recorder office can give you the county-side paper trail that supports the police record. If it does not, you still know where the boundaries are, and that keeps the search focused.

Utah Help for Juab County Police Records

When a Juab County search needs a state-level step, Utah has several official tools that fit the job. The GRAMA law at Utah Code Title 63G, Chapter 2 explains how public access and protected records are balanced across the state. That is the framework behind a county response, a court response, or a redaction.

If the matter becomes a criminal-history question, the Bureau of Criminal Identification pages at bci.utah.gov and bci.utah.gov/criminal-records/ are the right starting points. If a record has already been cleared or sealed, the Utah expungement pages at bci.utah.gov/expungements/ and expungementstatus.utah.gov can help you check the status and learn the next step.

The Utah Courts site at utcourts.gov is useful when a county police record turns into a case file that needs a court search. The Utah State Archives at archives.utah.gov can also help when an older file has moved out of the active county office. In practice, those state pages sit beside Juab County Police Records, not above them. You start local, then move outward only if the local file trail needs a wider net.

That is the cleanest way to search in Juab County. Use the sheriff for police records, the jail for custody, the justice court for case files, and the recorder only when a property or document trail is part of the question.

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