Holladay People Search Resources

Holladay People Search works best when you treat the Unified Police Department as the first records stop for police matters and Salt Lake County as the next stop when the city clue is not enough. Holladay contracts with UPD for police services, so incident reports and other law-enforcement files follow the precinct structure rather than a standalone city police desk. That makes the search easier once you know whether you need a report, a custody check, or a county case. If the city-side clue is thin, the county and state tools can keep the trail moving without forcing you to start over.

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Holladay Quick Facts

UPD Precinct Police Service Route
Salt Lake County County Backup
Third District Court Trail
GRAMA Records Process

Holladay People Search Sources

Start with the office that matches the record type you already have. Holladay uses the Unified Police Department for police services, so the precinct page is the best first stop when the search begins with an incident, an arrest, or a report number. The UPD records request page is the place to use when you need the file itself rather than a general contact point. Salt Lake County becomes the next layer when the city clue turns into a county case, a county custody check, or a county property trail. State tools matter when you need a public case view or an older historical record after the local file has done its part.

Office Use
Holladay UPD Precinct Local police service area and precinct contact
Unified Police Department Records Request Incident reports and UPD law-enforcement records
Salt Lake County Sheriff's Office Inmate Lookup Current custody checks and booking lookups
Salt Lake County NextRequest Public Records Portal County GRAMA tracking and digital replies
Third District Court County court cases, hearings, and public case files
Salt Lake County Recorder Property records, deeds, and document history
Utah Courts XChange Public case search before requesting copies

The UPD precinct page gives you the local contact path, and the main office at 3365 S 900 West in Salt Lake City is the physical place to keep in mind when the online request is not enough. The phone number is (801) 743-7000. That matters because Holladay does not have to maintain a separate municipal police desk to make the search work. Instead, the precinct and records request pages show you where the report or incident file should live. If you already know the date, names, or location, keep those details ready. Specific details give the records office a better chance of finding the right file on the first pass.

Holladay People Search gets easier when you separate police-service records from county records. A precinct page is the right place for UPD-era incident work, but a county case or county custody issue belongs one layer outward. That is why the county and state pages are useful even when the first clue starts at the precinct. The record may be public, but it can still be spread across more than one office. Matching the clue to the office keeps the search focused and keeps you from making the same request in the wrong queue.

Holladay People Search and UPD Records

The Unified Police Department precinct page is the main starting point when a Holladay People Search begins with a report, an incident, or a recent law-enforcement event. Because Holladay contracts with UPD, the police-side trail follows the precinct and records-request structure rather than a city police department page. That makes the request path clearer once you know the record type. A 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 with UPD or whether a related matter moved into Salt Lake County or the state court system. That is why the precinct 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 file is incomplete.

The official precinct page at Unified Police Holladay Precinct is the place to start when the clue is a city incident or report.

Holladay People Search UPD precinct page

That image marks the Holladay police-service path and keeps the search tied to the official UPD precinct page rather than a general contact question.

If the office asks for a formal request, that is still part of the same process. You do not need a new strategy; you just need enough detail to locate the public record and let the office decide what can be released. That is often the difference between a quick answer and a request that comes back with follow-up questions.

Holladay People Search and Salt Lake County Files

Salt Lake County is the next layer for many Holladay searches because county offices hold the broader custody, court, property, and request trail. A UPD 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 records bureau. That is normal in Salt Lake County, and it is why the county page on this site matters. It gives you one place to move from the UPD clue to the next county office without restarting the search from scratch.

The Salt Lake County Sheriff's Office inmate lookup is the fastest public custody check when a Holladay 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 bureau 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 request path at Salt Lake County NextRequest Public Records Portal is useful when the file is not enough on its own and you need a tracked county request. The county recorder at Salt Lake County Recorder is the next stop when the search turns into a property or document question. If the lead becomes a court matter, the Third District Court and Utah Courts XChange are the right public case tools. The county page on this site is the best local backup when the Holladay clue leaves the precinct and needs a county desk to finish the job.

The Salt Lake County NextRequest Public Records Portal is also the safest visual fallback when the search turns into custody work.

Holladay People Search county request backup

That county image fits the Holladay record trail because many police-service questions become county request or county case searches once the first report is found.

Holladay People Search and State Records

Some Holladay searches need more than a precinct page or a county file. They need a state case check, a verification record, or a historical file trail. Utah Courts XChange is the public case-search layer that helps when a UPD or county lead turns into a court file. The Utah State Law Library is another useful stop when you want to review the case path before asking for copies. Those tools help you avoid guessing about the next office and make the search more methodical.

The Utah Office of Vital Records and Statistics can help when the question turns into an identity or life-event search instead of a police or case question. Marriage and divorce verification can help connect the same person across different records, which is often the missing link in a Holladay People Search. If the trail is older, the Utah State Archives can provide the historical record layer that the city and county offices no longer keep at the counter.

The statewide case search at Utah Courts XChange is the best next step when a Holladay search needs a court file rather than another UPD request.

The Utah Courts XChange page and the state archives and vital records offices are the clean backup when a Holladay lead turns into a verification or historical question.

Holladay People Search state records page

That image marks the GRAMA and state-record layer, which is useful when the precinct and county pages have already done their part.

Holladay People Search Tips

Keep the request specific. A name, date, address, or report number gives the precinct or county a much better chance of finding the right file on the first pass. That matters in Holladay because police-service records, county files, and state files all live in different places. If you are not sure which office owns the file, start with the record type first and the office second. That keeps the request from getting stuck in the wrong queue.

It also helps to treat UPD records, county case files, property records, and state files as separate lanes. A precinct response may show the event or incident, while the county file may show the later case or document trail. Once you know the lane, the search becomes easier to follow and less likely to drift into the wrong office.

If the first response is redacted or incomplete, do not stop. Move to the county or state layer and use the UPD clue as the anchor. That step-by-step approach is the most reliable way to handle a Holladay People Search because the paper trail often spans more than one office.

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Use the county and city pages when you want a wider Salt Lake County search path. Holladay is the local starting point, and the county page fills in the sheriff, court, and request steps when the trail moves beyond the precinct.