Clearfield People Search Resources
Clearfield People Search usually starts with the police records page because that is the city office that owns the first public clues in a local search. The department processes records requests through GRAMA, so the request has to be specific enough for the staff to locate the file quickly. If the city record is not the whole answer, Davis County and the state court system carry the search forward with custody, case, and public-document records. That makes Clearfield practical to search once you know the record type. A name, a date, and the place of the event are enough to move from the city desk to the county or state source that holds the next file.
Clearfield Quick Facts
Clearfield People Search Sources
Start with the source that matches the clue you already have. Clearfield police records are the first city-level stop when the search begins with an incident, an arrest, or a report number. The city makes records requests through GRAMA, which means the request should be narrowly written and tied to the specific record you want. Davis County becomes the next step when the city file points to custody, court, property, or a county records question. State tools matter when the trail needs public case access or a verification record after the city and county offices have done their part.
| Office | Use |
|---|---|
| Clearfield Police Department | Local police records and GRAMA entry point |
| Davis County Sheriff Inmate Roster | Current custody checks and booking lookups |
| Davis County Sheriff's Office Records Division | County arrest, incident, and report requests |
| Second District Court - Davis County | County court cases, hearings, and public case files |
| Davis County Clerk/Auditor Record Requests | County public records and request routing |
| Davis County Assessor | Property records and parcel research |
| Utah Courts XChange | Public case search before requesting copies |
The city police page is the cleanest local entry point, and it gives you the address and phone number in one place. Clearfield Police is at 55 S State St, Clearfield, UT 84015, and the phone number is (801) 525-2806. That is the right office when you already know the person, the date, or the location involved. A focused request gives the department a better chance of finding the right file on the first pass. It also keeps the search from drifting into county or state offices before the city has had a chance to answer the local records question.
Clearfield People Search works better when you treat the police page as the real front door and not just a general contact line. The city says records requests are processed through GRAMA, so the request should be detailed enough for staff to identify the file without guessing. If the city owns the record, it can tell you whether the file is public, whether the request needs more detail, or whether the next step belongs with Davis County. That keeps the search practical and stops you from scattering the same name across unrelated desks.
Clearfield People Search and Police Records
The Clearfield police page is the main city source for a People Search tied to an incident, an arrest, or a recent report. The department address at 55 S State St makes the local contact easy to pin down, and the phone number at (801) 525-2806 gives you a direct line if you need to ask how the request should be filed. Because the city routes records through GRAMA, the key to a useful response is specificity. A full name, an approximate date, and the place where the event happened are usually enough to get the records staff moving. If you have a report number, include it. The more exact the request, the less time the office spends sorting out what you meant.
Police records usually answer the first question only. They can show the incident trail, the date, the location, and the officers or people involved. They can also tell you whether the file remains at the city level or whether a related matter moved into Davis County or the state court system. That is why the police page is the right first stop and not the last one. It gives you the cleanest local path into the record and sets up the next move if the city file is incomplete.
The official Clearfield police page is the place to start when the clue is a city incident or report.
Clearfield People Search and Davis County Files
Davis County is the next layer for many Clearfield searches because county offices hold the broader custody, court, and records trail. A city police report can point to a county case. A city address can point to a county property record. A custody clue can point to the jail roster or the sheriff records division. That is normal in Davis County, and it is why the county page on this site matters. It gives you one place to move from the city clue to the next county office without restarting the search from scratch.
The Davis County Sheriff's Office inmate roster is the quickest public custody check when a Clearfield People Search turns into a booking question. If the name is current, the roster can show whether the person is in custody without forcing a formal request. If you need more than the roster, the sheriff records division can handle arrest files and incident records through GRAMA. That makes the county layer a practical backup rather than just a second place to guess.
The county records path is useful when the city file is not enough. The Second District Court is the right next stop when the search turns into a filing or hearing question. The clerk and auditor records request page can help when the lead becomes a county document rather than a police file. If the search turns into a property question, the Davis County Assessor is the right office for parcel and ownership research. The county page on this site is the best local backup when the Clearfield clue leaves city hall and needs a county desk to finish the job.
The county inmate roster at Davis County Sheriff Inmate Roster is the safest visual fallback when a Clearfield search turns into custody work.
That county roster view helps you confirm the right person before you move on to a records request, court search, or another county office.
Clearfield People Search and State Records
State records come into play when the Clearfield trail turns into a court question, a verification question, or an older file search. Utah's GRAMA law at Utah Government Records Access and Management Act is the framework behind the city and county request process. It explains why a request may take time and why the office may ask for a more specific description before releasing a copy. That makes it a useful anchor when the local records request is public but not instant.
The state court system is the next layer when the city clue becomes a docket question. Utah Courts XChange is the public case search layer that can show the court trail before you ask for copies, and the Utah Courts Directory helps you confirm the courthouse or clerk office before you go in person. That matters when you want to know whether the matter belongs at the city desk, the county desk, or the courthouse clerk.
The Utah State Law Library is helpful if you want a free place to think through the court path before making a request. The Utah State Archives and Records Service becomes important when the record is older and the live office no longer holds the whole file. If you need a statewide verification instead of a police file, the Utah Office of Vital Records and Statistics is the clean state fallback for marriage and divorce records. Those sources do not replace the city page. They finish the search when the city and county offices have done their part.
State tools work best when the request is narrow and tied to the right record type. A court case, a vital record, and an archive file are different things even if they involve the same person. If you keep that distinction in view, the state layer becomes a clean way to finish the search rather than a second place to guess.
Clearfield People Search Tips
Keep the request tight. A full name, an approximate date, a location, and a record type are usually enough to get the right office moving. That is true for Clearfield police records, Davis County custody checks, and state court searches. It is also true for GRAMA requests. The more exact the request, the less the office has to guess about what you meant.
If the first reply is redacted or incomplete, do not stop there. That usually means the record is public in part and restricted in part, not that the trail is missing. In Clearfield, that often means the next step belongs with Davis County or the state court system. Moving in that order keeps the search organized and avoids sending the same question to several offices at once.
The most reliable Clearfield People Search workflow is simple: city first, county second, state third. Once you separate those lanes, the record trail becomes much easier to read and the follow-up questions get smaller instead of larger.
Browse Clearfield People Search
Use the county and city pages when you want a wider Davis County search path. Clearfield is the city starting point, but the county page fills in the sheriff, court, and record request steps when the trail leaves city hall.