Find Kane County Police Records
Kane County Police Records usually begin with the sheriff's office or the jail, then move into court records if a case is filed. That makes the county a good place to start when you need a booking check, a custody question, or a record trail tied to a recent incident. Kane County's public contact points are clear, and the county keeps the main phone numbers for administration, records, jail, and dispatch in one place. If you know what kind of file you want, the search stays tight and local.
Kane County Quick Facts
Kane County Police Records Office
The Kane County Sheriff's Office is the main local source for Kane County Police Records. Sheriff Tracy Glover and the staff in Kanab keep the public contact paths together, which helps when a question starts with a name but ends with a file. The office lists administration, records, jail, non-emergency dispatch, and fax numbers on the same page, so you can tell which desk should get your call before you leave home.
The sheriff office is at 971 East Kaneplex Drive, Kanab, UT 84741. Administration is (435) 644-4987, records is (435) 644-4916, jail is (435) 644-4914, non-emergency dispatch is (435) 644-2349, and fax is (435) 644-2096. The page also lists victim services and tracking class contacts, which tells you the county has built several paths around the same public safety office.
Kane County police records searches often start with a phone call because the county keeps the key lines available and easy to find. That is useful if you need to confirm whether a request belongs with records, jail, or a court file. A clear office split makes it easier to ask for the right record the first time.
The Utah GRAMA page is shown below because Kane County records requests still follow Utah's public-record access law.
This Utah GRAMA image is a useful backdrop for Kane County because it shows the state access rules that sit behind a county records request.
| Office | Kane County Sheriff's Office |
|---|---|
| Address | 971 East Kaneplex Drive Kanab, UT 84741 |
| Administration | (435) 644-4987 |
| Records | (435) 644-4916 |
| Jail | (435) 644-4914 |
Kane County Police Records and Jail Service
The jail is a major part of Kane County Police Records because custody, booking, and visitation details often come before a formal records request. The county jail page says legal mail should be addressed to the inmate's full name and inmate ID number at 971 East Kaneplex Drive in Kanab. That matters if you are trying to send something to a person in custody and need to keep the mailing line exact.
Kane County also uses video visitation on Wednesday evenings from 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM and Saturday mornings from 9:00 AM to noon. Visitors must be pre-approved and added to the inmate's list. The county says the daily population averages about 225 inmates and that there are around 4,500 bookings each year. Those details show why the jail side is often the first stop when someone needs a fast public check before asking for a deeper file.
Inmate search is available through VineLink or by calling the jail directly. Mugshot requests can be made by mail with an email address included. That is a practical mix of online and mail-based access, and it gives you options when you need a current status check, a booking note, or a custody confirmation tied to a Kane County police record.
The Utah Courts site is shown below because Kane County jail activity can quickly turn into a public court file.
This Utah courts image is useful for Kane County because jail activity often leads to a case file, a hearing date, or another court-side record.
Kane County Police Records Requests
The records line on the sheriff site is the place to start when you want the county's own response path for Kane County Police Records. The office gives the records phone separately from administration, which is helpful when you are trying to ask about a file instead of a general public-safety question. Kane County keeps that structure simple on purpose.
If you are sending a request, keep the facts narrow and easy to search. Give the name, the date, the type of record, and any booking or incident number you already know. If you are asking for a jail photo or an inmate detail, say that plainly. If you are asking for a report, describe the event instead of using a broad phrase that could match a dozen files.
Kane County Police Records requests are easier to handle when you know which office should see them first.
- Use the records line for a written police-record question
- Use the jail line for custody or inmate status
- Use dispatch only for immediate public safety calls
- Use mail when the request needs a paper trail
That list is not a form. It is the practical path the county itself lays out through its office numbers. The best requests are plain, specific, and tied to one event.
Note: Kane County police records are easier to track when you start with the sheriff records desk and use the jail line only for custody questions.
Kane County Police Records and Court Trails
Kane County jail and booking records often lead to a court trail. When that happens, the Utah Courts site at utcourts.gov becomes the best statewide follow-up. It gives you the official place to search for public case information, court tools, and other judicial resources. That matters in Kane County because a booking note is only the first part of the story.
The county jail page tells you how to reach the inmate, how to check status, and how to ask for a mugshot request. The court side tells you what happened after the booking. If you are trying to line up a sheriff record with a later hearing, the court page is the clean bridge between those two records. It is also the right place to check whether the case moved into another public file.
For older material or court records that have left the active file room, the Utah State Archives at archives.utah.gov can help. That is not the first stop for a fresh Kane County booking, but it is useful if the case is old or if you need to trace the file after it leaves the county office. The state archive works well with local records because it fills in the gap after the county file ages out.
The court and archive side are worth checking when a Kane County Police Records search needs more than a jail phone call. They help you move from a recent custody note to a fuller history of what the court did next.
Utah Help for Kane County Police Records
When a Kane County request turns into a state-level question, Utah's official tools are the next step. The GRAMA law at Utah Code Title 63G, Chapter 2 explains how public access and protected records work in Utah. That is the rule set behind any county response, redaction, or denial.
The Bureau of Criminal Identification at bci.utah.gov and bci.utah.gov/criminal-records/ is the official place for Utah criminal history services. If a Kane County record needs an expungement follow-up, the state expungement pages at bci.utah.gov/expungements/ and expungementstatus.utah.gov give you the next official step. Those pages do not replace a county record, but they do help when the county file has moved into the state system.
Kane County works best when you treat the sheriff, jail, court, and state pages as a chain. Start local. Move to the court if the case filed. Use BCI or the archive only when the record trail reaches beyond the county office.
That approach keeps a Kane County Police Records search simple and accurate. It also keeps you from using the wrong office for the wrong part of the record.