Tooele People Search Resources
Tooele People Search works best when you match the clue to the right office first. A police record starts at the police department. A county case starts at the courthouse or county page. A property clue may lead to the county sheriff, clerk, or assessor. That is the value of the Tooele search trail. It gives you a clean way to move from a quick public check to a deeper request without wandering through offices that do not own the record you need. The city and county pages together make the route clearer.
Tooele Quick Facts
Tooele People Search Sources
Start with the office that matches the clue you already have. The police department handles city police records and GRAMA requests. The county page gives you the sheriff, jail, court, clerk, and assessor paths that often sit behind a city clue. The court system gives you the docket trail. That is the basic Tooele pattern. It keeps the search focused and gives you a way to move from a city hit to a county or state file without guessing which office should own the record.
| Office | Use |
|---|---|
| Tooele Police Records | City police records and GRAMA requests |
| Tooele County People Search Resources | County sheriff, court, clerk, and property fallback |
| Third District Court Tooele | Civil, criminal, domestic, probate, and small claims files |
| Utah Courts XChange | Public case search for county and court follow-up |
The police department is at 50 North Garden Street, Tooele, UT 84074, and the phone number is (435) 882-8900. That is the best city-level starting point when you have a report number, a date, or an incident clue. The city says records requests are processed through GRAMA, which means the request should be specific enough for staff to find the right file. A focused request saves time and keeps the response cleaner.
The county page matters because Tooele searches often cross from city police into county court or county records. That is normal. The county sheriff can hold custody and booking clues. The clerk can hold marriage and county records. The assessor can tie a person to a parcel. The county page keeps all of that in one place when the city record is only the first step.
Tooele People Search and Police Records
The police department is the main city source when a Tooele People Search starts with an incident, an arrest, or a police report. The department keeps the request path at the city level, and the city page makes it clear that police records are handled through the GRAMA process. That means a good request should include a name, a date, and a location. If you have a report number, include that too. Those details help the city find the right file without sending you back for more information.
The official police page at Tooele Police Records is the best place to begin when the search is about a city police event. The department is at 50 North Garden Street and the phone is (435) 882-8900. That office is the cleanest way to start a police record request before you move to a county case or a state court file. The city route is simple, but it still works best when you keep the request specific.
The official police page at Tooele Police Records is the right city entry point here, and this page uses the official state public records image to keep the request tied to that source while still giving you a visual anchor for the records path.
That state image is a clean match for the Tooele police request path and keeps the city search anchored to the official source.
When you write the request, keep it short and direct:
- Full name of the person involved
- Date or date range of the event
- Location of the incident
- Report or case number, if known
- Return contact information
Tooele People Search at Court
The Third District Court in Tooele is the next stop when a Tooele People Search turns from a police report into a case file. The court handles civil, criminal, domestic relations, probate, and small claims files. That means the docket can show the filing date, the party names, the hearing trail, and the final outcome. If the police page gives you only a booking or incident hint, the court is where you usually find the rest of the legal record.
The court page at Third District Court - Tooele lists the courthouse at 74 South 100 East, Suite 14, Tooele, UT 84074, with phone number (435) 833-8000. The court page also points you to the public access terminals and the clerk office for copies. If you need to check the court path first, Utah Courts XChange is the best online layer to use before you go in person.
That court record is the legal frame of the case. It is not the same as the police report, and it is not the same as a county property record. It shows the case history the court owns. That is useful because it gives you the formal record after the city report has done its part. If the file is partly sealed or redacted, the public parts still help you confirm that you have the right case.
The state court search at Utah Courts XChange Public Case Search is the best online companion for the Tooele court trail.
That image shows the statewide court search layer that often follows a Tooele city lead.
Tooele People Search and County Files
Tooele County is the natural fallback when the city page does not finish the search. The county sheriff, detention center, clerk, and assessor all cover records that often sit behind a city clue. That can include custody details, jail records, marriage records, county minutes, and property information. If the Tooele lead turns into a county record, the county page on this site gives you a cleaner route than starting from scratch.
The county sheriff page is the best county-level fit when the search is about custody or law enforcement records. The detention center can help when you need jail information. The clerk can help with county records and marriage records. The assessor can help with parcel and property details. Those records do not all answer the same question, but together they give the county trail its shape.
The county sheriff page at Tooele County People Search Resources is the right fallback when a city lead turns into a county booking or county case search.
That county image is a good visual anchor when the search moves from city police into county custody or county records.
Tooele County records are also useful because they help confirm the person behind the city clue. A property record can show a home or parcel. A county minute can show a public action. A marriage record can show a family link. That makes the county page a strong second stop once the city file has done its job.
Tooele People Search and State Records
State records help when the city and county pages still leave a gap. The GRAMA statute explains the rules behind public records requests, and the state archive and vital records offices help when the record is older or needs verification. That matters in Tooele because a city report may lead to a county docket, and a county docket may lead to a statewide check for a marriage, divorce, or archived file. The state layer gives the search its last mile.
When the record turns into a public request, the GRAMA page at Utah Government Records Access and Management Act is the rule set behind the process. It explains why an office may release part of a file, withhold part of it, or ask for more time. That is useful when the request gets broader than the first record.
The state vital records office is the right place when the search needs proof of a life event rather than a city report. The archives help when the file is older and no longer in a live office. Together they give you a way to keep the search going after the city and county pages have done their work.
The GRAMA page at Utah Government Records Access and Management Act is the key state rule behind a Tooele public records request.
That image is a useful reminder that county and city requests still sit inside Utah's open records rules.
The Utah Office of Vital Records and Statistics can also help when a Tooele search needs marriage or divorce verification, and the Utah State Archives can help when the record is historical rather than current.
Tooele People Search Tips
Keep the request narrow. A name, date, location, and record type are usually enough to start. That matters in Tooele because the city, county, and state records all sit in different offices. If you send a broad request to the wrong place, the search slows down. If you send a focused request to the right office, the answer is usually cleaner and faster.
It also helps to remember that one file type may not tell the whole story. A police report can lead to a court file. A county record can confirm a property or family link. A vital record can verify the same person in a different setting. That is why a Tooele search works best when you move from the city page to the county page and then to the state tools only when needed.
- Use the exact name spelling when possible
- Add a date or date range
- Keep the street or location close at hand
- Use report or case numbers when you have them
- Match the request to the office that wrote the record
Once you sort the first clue, Tooele People Search becomes much easier to read. The city gives you the start, the county gives you the backup, and the state tools help when the trail gets older or more detailed.
Browse Tooele People Search
Use the county and city pages when you want a wider Tooele County search path. Tooele is the city hub, but the county page fills in the sheriff, court, and request steps when the trail leaves city hall.