Search Brookfield Released Inmates
Brookfield Released Inmates searches often begin with the city police records desk and then move to Waukesha County if the record turns into a jail or court matter. That split is useful because the city keeps the first report, while the county keeps the jail and copy side. If you only have a name, a report date, or a place in Brookfield, the city page can help point you toward the right office. If the person was booked and later released, the county path becomes the next step.
Brookfield Released Inmates Search
The Brookfield Police Department records page is the city starting point. Open Brookfield Police Records to reach the records division. The research says the department has eight Records Clerks and one Time and Attendance Clerk, with office hours from 7:00 AM to 5:00 PM Monday through Friday. The records personnel phone number is listed too, which gives you a real path to the office if you need to ask about a report or a released person.
That city page also matters because it shows how the office works. Staff prepare and transcribe reports for court, and the department handles thousands of reports each year. That tells you the police page is not just a contact page. It is the point where a local report turns into a record that can later feed a court file or a county request. For a released inmates search, that is the first link in the chain.
Brookfield also has a town clerk path for general records. The town page at Town of Brookfield Open Records says police records requests must be made directly with the police department under Wis. Stat. 19.35(7)(c). It also says general requests must be made in writing and must be specific. That is useful when you are trying to keep the request narrow and tied to the right office.
- Full name or a known alias
- Approximate report date or booking date
- Any Brookfield address or place clue
- Record type, if you know whether it is police or jail side
The best Brookfield search path is simple. City police first, town clerk for broad records questions, and county records after that if the person moved into Waukesha County custody.
Brookfield Released Inmates Records
The police records desk is the best place to start because it is where the city report begins. You can reach the office during weekday hours, and the records personnel phone number gives you a direct contact point. That matters when a release search is built around a report number or a date rather than a full case file. A clean city record can save a lot of time later.
Brookfield is also a city that points you toward the county when needed. The city routes crime reporting through the Waukesha County Communication Center, which tells you the county is part of the local public safety path. If the person was later booked into county custody, the Waukesha County sheriff records division becomes the next place to ask. That county page can handle copies and jail-side follow-up when the city file is no longer enough.
Use Waukesha County Records Division if the search moves beyond the city report. The records division lists copy fees, hours, mail address, and the Permissible Uses Form. That gives you a clear county request path if the Brookfield matter became a Waukesha County jail or court record. It is a better match than a broad statewide search when you already know the county.
For public records law, Wis. Stat. 19.35 and the Wisconsin DOJ Office of Open Government are the best official references. They can help when the office needs a tighter request or when you want to understand why some parts of a file may be redacted. That keeps the Brookfield search grounded in official sources.
Note: Brookfield police records stay with the city department, while general town records and county jail copies sit in different offices, so the office name matters as much as the record name.
Brookfield Released Inmates Images
The first Brookfield image comes from Brookfield Police Records. It matches the city desk that handles the first report and the main records request path.

That image fits the city side of the search because it points back to the office that prepared the report in the first place.
The second Brookfield image comes from Town of Brookfield Open Records. It shows the town clerk request path for general records.

That image fits the broader records side of the search and helps keep the request tied to an official office, not a guess.
Brookfield Released Inmates Court Follow-Up
Released Inmates searches often end in court. If a Brookfield arrest became a Waukesha County case, Wisconsin Circuit Court Access at wcca.wicourts.gov is the public summary view to use. It can show case status, parties, and docket lines, which helps you see what happened after the booking. It will not give you the full packet, but it will point you at the right file.
If the person moved into state custody or supervision, the Wisconsin DOC Offender Locator can show discharge dates and supervision status. That is a useful follow-up when the city report has already ended and the county file no longer shows a live booking. DOC NOTIS at DOC NOTIS can help with alert style updates if the matter is tied to victim notice.
VINE at vinelink.com is another practical follow-up if you want custody change alerts. It is better for status change notices than for copies, and that makes it a good fit when you want to watch the release trail rather than pull a paper file. That is often enough for family members and victims who just need to know what changed.
The Wisconsin State Law Library county resources page and the DOJ open government page can fill in the rest when you need a second official guide. Brookfield is small enough that the right office usually matters more than the broad search. If you keep the city, town, and county pages in order, the trail stays clear.
Getting Brookfield Released Inmates Copies
When you need a copy, name the office up front. Ask Brookfield Police for the city report. Ask the town clerk only for broad town records. Ask Waukesha County for the jail side or county records if the person moved into county custody. That office split matters because it keeps the request from bouncing between desks.
Waukesha County records division is the best county fallback for a Brookfield case. The page lists weekday hours, a page copy fee, a CD or DVD fee, and a mailing address. It also requires the Permissible Uses Form, so a specific request will move faster than a broad one. If you already have the report date or case number, include it. The office can work with a clean target much faster.
For state follow-up, the DOC Public Records page can help if the person moved into Wisconsin corrections custody. If the search leaves Wisconsin entirely, the Federal Bureau of Prisons Inmate Locator is the last official check. That keeps the Brookfield search complete without adding noise.
Brookfield works best when you move in order. Police first. Town and county second. WCCA and DOC after that. That keeps the record trail tight and local.