Herriman People Search Resources

Herriman People Search works best when the request starts with the exact record type you need. If the lead is a police report, the city police records page is the right front door. If the clue turns into a county case, a property document, or a historical file, Salt Lake County and the state tools can carry the search forward without breaking the trail. That matters in Herriman because local requests can move quickly from a city event to a county or state record set. The cleanest search is the one that matches the clue to the office that actually owns the file, then uses the next office only when the local page runs out of room.

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Herriman Quick Facts

Police Records City Entry Point
Salt Lake County County Backup
GRAMA Request Process
State Tools Court and Vital Records

Herriman People Search Sources

Herriman keeps the main search path fairly focused. The police department handles the record trail for incidents, dispatch follow-up, and requests for police files. The city records page and GRAMA process explain how the office accepts requests, how long the city has to respond, and where a requester should look for the fee schedule. That gives the city a clear public records lane instead of a loose contact form. When the lead becomes a county matter, Salt Lake County takes over with the sheriff, recorder, and district court records that often follow a local incident or property clue.

Office Use
Herriman Police Records Police reports, GRAMA requests, and fee guidance
Salt Lake County People Search Resources County sheriff, recorder, district court, and request backups
Utah GRAMA State records access rules behind local requests
Utah Courts XChange Public case search and court backup
Utah Office of Vital Records and Statistics Marriage and divorce verification backup

The live police records page explains that requests can be made in person, online, or by mail, and the department has up to ten business days to respond. It also points to the fee schedule and says the city will contact the requester when the record is ready. The police contact information on the site lists the main phone line as (801) 446-5323, the non-emergency dispatch line as (801) 840-4000, the office line as (801) 858-0035, and the records email as records@herrimanpd.gov. That is the practical starting point when a Herriman People Search is really a police records question.

The city page also shows where the department expects the request to land. The records contact area lists the police office at 5355 West Main Street in Herriman, and the page keeps the request tied to the department instead of a general city help desk. That is useful because a specific office and a specific record type usually produce a faster answer than a broad inquiry. If you already know the date, address, or report number, put that in the request and keep it narrow.

Salt Lake County is the next step when the local file only gives you part of the answer. A city incident can point to a county case. A city address can point to a recorder file. A city request can lead to a county public records portal. The county page on this site gathers the sheriff, recorder, district court, and request paths in one place, which makes it easier to keep the search moving when the city file is not the whole story.

Herriman People Search and Police Records

The Herriman Police Records page is the main entry point when the search starts with an incident, a report number, or a recent response. The department says a requester must describe the record with reasonable specificity, and that is exactly what keeps a public records request from stalling. A name, date, address, or incident time gives the records staff something concrete to work from. If the matter is routine, the office can route it through GRAMA. If the matter is more sensitive, the same page still gives you the official contact path and the published response timing.

The page is also useful because it separates routine public contact from emergency reporting. Herriman lists emergency calls at 911 and directs other crimes or suspicious activity to dispatch at 801-840-4000. That separation matters in a People Search because it tells you whether you are looking for a report, a live response, or a paper trail that already exists. The records request page is the place for the paper trail, not the emergency line. That distinction saves time when you only need the report and not a new call for service.

The official page at Herriman Police Records is the best place to start when the lead is a police record rather than a city hall action.

The state GRAMA statute at Utah GRAMA explains why the department asks for a written, specific request and why the office has a set response window.

Herriman People Search GRAMA records page

That image marks the public records law that sits behind a Herriman police request, which is helpful when the search needs a clean route from a report to a releasable file.

Herriman County Backups

Herriman searches often move into Salt Lake County once the city clue is clear. That is normal. A city report can lead to a county case number. A city property clue can lead to a recorder entry. A city request can lead to a county public records portal. The county page on this site keeps those options together so the search stays organized when the city page gives you only the first layer of the record.

The Salt Lake County page at Salt Lake County People Search Resources is the best backup when the local path needs more depth. From there, you can move into the sheriff records bureau, the recorder, the district court, or the county request system. If the Herriman lead turns into a document search instead of a police file, the county recorder is often the better next step. If it turns into a court matter, the county and state case tools can keep the trail open without forcing you to restart.

County request portals matter because they keep the paper trail visible. Salt Lake County uses NextRequest for many public records requests, so you can submit, track, and receive records in one place when the department supports the portal. That is useful for a Herriman People Search because it keeps a city clue from getting stuck at the first office. If the file belongs to the county, the county portal is usually the straightest path forward.

The county request portal at Salt Lake County NextRequest Public Records is a strong backup when a Herriman search leaves the city level and needs a wider request trail.

Herriman People Search county records backup

That county view is a practical reminder that local searches often move into a larger request system once the city office confirms which record type you need.

Herriman State Tools

Some searches need more than a city or county file. They need a court look, a state verification, or an older archive source. That is where the state tools help. Utah Courts XChange gives you a public case path when a city matter grows into a court file. The Utah State Law Library is another useful stop because it helps you review the case trail before you ask for copies. Those tools are practical when the local file is only part of the story and you need to confirm the larger record chain.

The Utah Office of Vital Records and Statistics matters when a search turns into an identity check instead of a police or court question. Marriage and divorce verification can confirm the same person across different records, and that can be the missing link in a Herriman People Search. If you are trying to match a name, a spouse, or a life event, the state record is often the cleaner source than a city report or a county note.

The Utah State Archives and Records Service is worth using when the clue is older than the city front desk can easily pull. Historical files, older indexes, and archive material often live there after the active record has moved on. That gives you a place to keep going instead of stopping when the local page runs out. For a longer search, the state layer can be the difference between a partial answer and a complete one.

The statewide case search at Utah Courts XChange is often the best next step when a Herriman search needs a court record rather than a city report.

Herriman People Search vital records page

That image shows the state verification path, which is useful when the city or county clue needs a clean identity check or a certified life-event record.

Herriman People Search Tips

Keep the request narrow. A full name, a date, a street, or a report number is usually enough to get the right office moving. That matters in Herriman because police, county, and state records all live in different places. If you send a broad request to the wrong desk, the search slows down. If you send a specific request to the right desk, the reply is usually cleaner and easier to use.

It also helps to think in record types. Police records, county case files, property records, and vital records answer different questions. A city response may show the event, while the county file may show the later case or document trail. Once you know the type, the office choice gets easier. Herriman People Search work gets better when the clue and the office match instead of fighting each other.

If the file comes back redacted or partly sealed, do not stop there. It may only mean that you need the next office in the chain, not that the record does not exist. The county page, the court system, and the state archives can extend the search without making you start over. That step-by-step approach is the most reliable way to work through a local record trail.

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Use the county and city pages when you want a wider Salt Lake County search path. Herriman is the city hub, and the county page fills in the sheriff, court, and record request steps when the trail leaves city hall.