La Crosse Released Inmates Search
La Crosse Released Inmates searches often start with the city police services page and then move to the county jail locator when the record shifts from a report to a custody question. La Crosse gives you an online records path, a statement form, and the option to file an open records request. La Crosse County adds the inmate locator, the jail address, and the records division hours. That mix keeps the search local and official from the first step to the last.
La Crosse Released Inmates Search
Open La Crosse Police Department for the city records side. Research notes place the office at 400 La Crosse St., 1st Floor, La Crosse, WI 54601, with the phone at (608) 789-7200 and the fax at (608) 789-7250. The city page offers File New Police Report, Submit Statement, and Open Records Request options, which makes it a practical front door for a released inmate search.
The request path is strong because it can be anonymous under Wisconsin law, and the portal lets you track the request once you create an account. That matters when the record starts with a police call or a city report and then turns into a custody check later. It also helps when you only know the date and place, not the full case number.
When the city side is not enough, La Crosse County Inmate Locator shows current inmates only. It can display booking information, bond or bail amounts, visiting schedules, and charges. If you want the broader public case summary, Wisconsin Circuit Court Access is the next official stop.
La Crosse's city page is also useful because the department gives more than one filing path. The police report page, statement form, and open records request tool all point to the same office, so you can choose the route that fits the record you already have. If the request is tied to a recent booking, the city contact path and the county inmate locator can be used together. The county tool is current only, which makes it a better custody check than an old roster when the release happened quickly.
- Full name or alias
- Approximate arrest or release date
- Location or incident clue
- Report number, if you have one
That small group of facts usually gets you to the right La Crosse desk much faster than a broad search ever will.
La Crosse County Released Inmates Records
The county sheriff page is the local follow-up. Open La Crosse County Sheriff's Office for the records and jail side of the search. Research notes place the jail at 333 Vine Street, La Crosse, WI 54601-3296, with the jail phone at (608) 785-9630 and the sheriff office at (608) 785-9629. The records division keeps weekday hours from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
The county inmate locator is useful because it shows current custody data instead of a stale roster snapshot. That means you can check whether the person is still in jail, has been released, or has moved to a later court or state record. If you need the broader public trail, the county search and WCCA together fill a lot of the gaps left by a short city report.
La Crosse is one of those places where the city and county tools work best as a pair. The police page captures the report. The sheriff page captures custody. The court summary ties the two together. That is the cleanest way to read a Released Inmates record in this county.
The county side stays active because the sheriff office and jail are both centered at 333 Vine Street. If you need to confirm whether the record moved after release, the jail line and the records division hours are enough to ask the right office the first time. For older files, the city and county trail can be read against WCCA so you can see whether the matter became a public case, a bond change, or a later court event.
Note: La Crosse County's locator shows current inmates only, so the county page and WCCA are the best companions when the status has already changed.
La Crosse Released Inmates Images
The county inmate locator is the first image source for this page. Open it here: La Crosse County inmate locator. It is the official county path for current custody information.

That image fits the county custody side of the search, which is exactly where many La Crosse release questions end up.
The county sheriff page is the second image source. Open it here: La Crosse County Sheriff's Office. It anchors the records and jail side of the local search.

That image fits the sheriff page and keeps the page rooted in a real county office instead of a third-party directory.
La Crosse Released Inmates Court Records
Released Inmates records are easier to read once the court side is added. Wisconsin Circuit Court Access can show the public case summary, hearing dates, parties, and current case status. It does not replace the full file, but it tells you which direction to go next. That is useful when the jail entry has already changed and you still need the public case line.
For later custody or supervision checks, DOC Offender Locator is the state tool to use. If the case has moved beyond the county jail, DOC can show whether a person is in state custody or under supervision. VINE can also help when you need custody alerts tied to a participating facility.
For open records questions, the Wisconsin DOJ Office of Open Government is the official reference. It keeps the request side tied to a state source, which is helpful if a city or county file needs a narrower follow-up.
Getting La Crosse Released Inmates Copies
When you need copies, start with the office that owns the record. The city police page is the right place for the report or statement side. The county sheriff page is the right place for custody records. If the matter moved into court, WCCA shows you the public case summary and points you toward the next office. That is the cleanest route for La Crosse.
Wisconsin public records law at Wis. Stat. 19.35 gives the access baseline, and the county records division may still apply standard copy fees. If the person moved to state supervision, the DOC Public Records page gives the state-side request path. Those official sources keep the search current and local.
La Crosse is a good example of a city where the police request, county locator, and court summary all work together. Once the right record is in hand, the rest of the trail is much easier to follow.
Older La Crosse records can also route through the clerk, so WCCA is the cleanest way to see which office still owns the paper file.