Find Pepin County Released Inmates

Pepin County Released Inmates searches usually begin with the sheriff's office in Durand, because the county keeps the custody trail close to the office that actually handles the jail. The sheriff's office is at 740 7th Avenue West in Durand, and the main number is (715) 672-5944. Pepin County also puts the jail inside the sheriff office structure, which means a direct call can answer the status question faster than a broad web search. If the person is no longer in custody, VINE and WCCA are the next official places to look.

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Pepin County Released Inmates Search Guide

The county sheriff page at Pepin County Sheriff's Office is the best local starting point. The page says the sheriff's office provides full-service law enforcement for all of Pepin County and that the office is divided into four main parts, including the Adult Detention Facility, also called the jail. That is a clear sign that a Pepin County Released Inmates search should start at the sheriff office, not with a private site or a stale copy of a roster.

The sheriff page also lists the office location in Durand and the contact numbers. The address is 740 7th Avenue West, Durand, WI 54736, and the main dispatch line is the same 715-672-5944 number given in the research. That matters because a small county often works best by phone. If you want to know whether a person is still in the jail, a direct office question often gets the cleanest answer.

Pepin County's jail page at Jail places the jail inside the sheriff office lobby. That location detail makes the county feel even more local and practical. It also tells you that the county keeps its detention function close to the rest of the sheriff operation. Pepin County jail and inmate records are searchable through VINE, so the county and state paths line up well for a Released Inmates search.

The state court access image from Wisconsin Circuit Court Access is a good fit for Pepin County because court records are often the next step after the jail answer.

Pepin County Released Inmates state WCCA image

That image fits the county because Pepin County searches often move from the sheriff office to the court docket. A small county needs a small number of clean steps.

Pepin County Released Inmates Lookup

The Pepin County Released Inmates lookup path is simple. Call the sheriff office, ask for the inmate status, and use VINE if you want a custody alert after the first answer. Because Pepin County is small, the direct office contact matters more than a web directory. The county's own sheriff page makes that clear by listing the office, the jail division, and the main phone in one place.

If you need a follow-up search after the person leaves local custody, VINE is the best status tool. It can show a later change without making you keep calling the office. That is useful in Pepin County because the sheriff office is the main local source, but the status can still change after release or transfer. VINE gives you the watch layer that the jail roster would have provided if the county kept one online.

After VINE, move to Wisconsin Circuit Court Access. WCCA can show whether the arrest became a case, whether a hearing is pending, or whether the public docket already has the release event you are trying to confirm. If the record moved into state custody, the Wisconsin DOC Offender Locator is the next place to check. It is the right tool for custody, not for copies or request letters.

Pepin County Released Inmates searches work best when you keep the order straight. Call first, check VINE second, and use WCCA or DOC only if the county trail needs a second layer. That is the cleanest way to avoid wasted time and repeated searches.

Note: Pepin County does not need a complicated search plan. The sheriff office in Durand, VINE, and WCCA solve most released inmate questions.

Pepin County Records and Copies

When you want a record copy, Wisconsin public records law is the starting point. Wis. Stat. ยง 19.35 sets the open records rule, and the Office of Open Government is the state guide for how to make the request clear and narrow. That is especially helpful in a smaller county where the office may be juggling jail, patrol, and dispatch work at the same time.

The Wisconsin State Law Library county resources page is a good backup when you want to confirm the county's records path before you ask for anything. If the person is still in a jail file, the sheriff office in Durand is the local office to contact. If the person moved into state custody, the DOC public records requests page is where the records question belongs.

A Pepin County Released Inmates request should stay tight. Give the full name, a date range, and the record type you want. If you ask for a release note, say so. If you want a booking or jail record, say that instead. A narrow request makes it easier for the county staff to find the right file the first time, and it avoids confusion about whether you want the live status, a copy, or a later court docket.

The county structure supports that kind of direct request. The sheriff office page, the jail page, and the state records law all point to the same idea. Use the office that owns the record, and keep the ask short.

Note: Narrow requests work best in Pepin County, especially when you already know the name and the date range you want reviewed.

Pepin County Released Inmates Follow-Up

If the Pepin County sheriff office no longer shows the person in custody, the follow-up usually runs through WCCA and then VINE or DOC. WCCA tells you whether a court case is still open. VINE tells you whether the custody status changes again. The DOC locator tells you if the person moved into state prison or supervision. Those are different questions, but together they give you a full public trail.

The county jail page keeps the search grounded in local government. Because the jail is part of the sheriff office, a Pepin County Released Inmates inquiry can often be answered with one phone call and one court check. If you need a written trail after that, the open records law and the Office of Open Government page give you the right request language. That is the cleanest path when the local answer is not enough.

If the trail leaves Wisconsin, use the Federal BOP locator. Most Pepin County searches will never get that far, but it is the correct final official source if the person moved into the federal system. Keeping that fallback in mind helps you finish the search without drifting into private databases that may not update on time.

Pepin County gives the public a small, direct search path. The sheriff office in Durand is the main local anchor, and the state tools fill the gaps after release.

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