Search Wasatch County Police Records

Wasatch County Police Records usually begin with the sheriff's office in Heber City, where the county keeps the main public contact points for dispatch, records, fingerprint service, and jail information. If you need a case report, a custody check, or a place to ask whether a file exists, the sheriff office gives you a direct route. That is useful in a county where the request path is simple but still depends on asking the right office. The county also gives the public a GRAMA email address, so a records request can move by mail, fax, or email when you already know what you need.

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Wasatch County Quick Facts

Heber City County Seat
(435) 654-1411 Dispatch Center
$25 Fingerprint Fee
Medium Security County Jail

Wasatch County Police Records Office

The Wasatch County Sheriff's Office is the main local source for Wasatch County Police Records. The county lists its office at 1361 South Highway 40 in Heber City, with fax at (435) 657-3580, non-emergency at (435) 654-1098, and the dispatch center at (435) 654-1411. That contact structure matters because it lets you move from a general question to the right desk without guessing. If you know whether your matter is a report, a jail question, or a records request, you can start in the right lane.

The sheriff page also gives the county's public safety services some shape. Wasatch County offers a free vehicle unlock service, a free medication disposal box in the sheriff's office entryway, and fingerprint service during weekday morning hours. Those details do not replace a records request, but they show where the county puts its day-to-day public contact work. If your search begins with a recent call or a county response, the sheriff office is still the first office to use.

The Wasatch County sheriff page is shown below because it gives the county's main police-records contact path in one place.

Wasatch County police records sheriff office page

That sheriff page is the best first stop for Wasatch County Police Records because it ties dispatch, records, and public service contacts together.

Office Wasatch County Sheriff's Office
Address 1361 South Highway 40
Heber City, UT 84032
Fax (435) 657-3580
Non-Emergency (435) 654-1098
Dispatch (435) 654-1411

Wasatch County Police Records Requests

Wasatch County says case reports can be requested through GRAMA by mail, fax, or email. The sheriff office gives the GRAMA request email as wcsorecords@wasatch.utah.gov, which keeps the request tied to a real county contact. If you already know the date, the person, or the type of report you want, the county can usually find the right file faster. A written request is better than a broad question because it tells staff exactly what you are after.

The Wasatch County request path is also practical because it sits next to the county's other public services. Fingerprint service runs Monday through Friday from 8:00 AM to 10:00 AM on a first come, first served basis. Valid ID is required, and the fee is $25 by credit card for two cards. Court-ordered fingerprinting is free if you bring the court paperwork. Those details matter when a records search and a service visit happen in the same trip.

The county does not need a long explanation. It needs a clear request. Name the report type, the date, and the person or event if you know it. If you want a case report, say that. If you want a custody or jail check, say that too. Clear facts help Wasatch County Police Records move through the right office without delay.

The Utah GRAMA page is shown below because Wasatch County uses the same public-record access law as the rest of the state.

Wasatch County police records and Utah GRAMA government records

That state GRAMA image is a good backdrop for Wasatch County because the sheriff office says case reports move through a formal records request process.

Use these details when you prepare a Wasatch County request:

  • The full name of the person or case
  • The date or approximate date of the event
  • The record type, such as case report or custody check
  • Your contact information for the county reply

Note: Wasatch County Police Records requests are easier to process when the request stays tight and names the report or event directly.

Wasatch County Police Records and Jail

The Wasatch County Jail is a medium-security facility at 1361 South Highway 40 in Heber City, and the jail phone is (435) 657-1619. That makes it the fastest stop when you need to confirm custody or ask about a recent booking. The county lists visitation by gender, with men visiting Tuesday evenings and Saturday afternoons, and women visiting Thursday evenings and Sunday afternoons. Each inmate gets one 30-minute visit per visiting day, so the schedule is structured and easy to follow.

Wasatch County also uses Evercom for phone services and takes mail at 1365 South Highway 40 in Heber City. Books and magazines are only accepted if they are sent directly from the manufacturer in the original packaging. Those rules do not replace a records request, but they show how the jail side of the county works. If you are trying to trace a recent custody event, the jail page can answer the quick question before you move to a written file request.

The Wasatch County Jail page is the right place to look when the record you need starts with custody or visitation and may later turn into a case file.

The Utah Courts page is shown below because a jail matter can become a public court record after the county has finished its part.

Wasatch County police records and Utah state courts system

That court image helps show the next step when a Wasatch County booking turns into a filing, hearing, or docket entry.

Wasatch County Police Records Services

Wasatch County's service list is part of the records trail because it shows how the sheriff office handles more than reports. Fingerprint service is available on weekday mornings, and a valid ID is required. The county says the fee is $25 for two cards by credit card, while court-ordered fingerprinting is free with the right paperwork. That is useful if your records search also needs identity verification or a court-related print.

The sheriff office also offers free vehicle unlock service through dispatch, with a waiver of liability, and a free medication disposal box in the office entryway. Those public services do not replace a police report, but they show the office's day-to-day role in the county. If you are trying to understand how a local incident was handled, those services can help you see the broader public safety function around the records desk.

The Bureau of Criminal Identification at bci.utah.gov/criminal-records/ is useful when a Wasatch County matter becomes a state criminal-history question. The expungements page at bci.utah.gov/expungements/ and the status portal at expungementstatus.utah.gov help if the county record has been sealed or is in the middle of a cleanup process. Those are state follow-up tools, not county substitutes, but they matter when the file trail moves beyond the jail desk.

The BCI Criminal Records Services page is shown below because it is the state reference for criminal-history records and challenge requests.

Wasatch County police records and Utah BCI criminal records services

That BCI image gives the state-level follow-up for Wasatch County when a local record becomes a broader history question.

State Help for Wasatch County Police Records

Utah state tools help fill in the gaps when a Wasatch County search reaches beyond the sheriff office. The Utah State Archives at archives.utah.gov is useful when an older record has moved out of the active county office, while the Utah Courts site at utcourts.gov helps connect a local booking to a court case. Those pages are not a replacement for Wasatch County Police Records, but they are the right follow-up when the file trail expands.

The county and state pages work best together. Start with the sheriff office for the local record, use the GRAMA email for a formal request, and turn to BCI, the courts, or the archives only when the county record needs a wider search. That sequence keeps the request specific and helps you avoid asking the wrong office for the wrong paper.

Wasatch County keeps the process straightforward. That is a good thing. A short request, a known date, and the right office usually get you further than a broad story and a guess.

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