Search Redmond Released Inmates

Redmond released inmates are best traced by starting with the state custody record, then moving into city police and county court records when you need more detail. That fits Redmond because the city police page gives the public crime report tools, crime stats, and common resources, while the city site gives you the official front door for city notices and service updates. If you already have a DOC number, begin there. If you only have a local clue, the King County court directory and VINE can still point you to the right record path. The result is a search that stays local to Redmond instead of drifting into a broad statewide scan.

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DOC State custody
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42.56 Public records law

Redmond Released Inmates Search

The Washington DOC Incarcerated Search at doc.wa.gov/records/incarcerated-data-search/incarcerated-search is the first tool to use for Redmond released inmates held under state jurisdiction. It accepts a DOC number or a name and returns the current facility, the earliest possible release date, and current or historical incarceration data. That makes it the fastest way to see whether someone is still in prison, has moved into a community placement, or is already part of a deeper release trail. The search covers all state-run prisons and community custody placements across Washington.

The city website at redmond.gov gives Redmond a strong local front door. The site highlights a new translation service, city council actions, public notices, and public events. That matters because a release search can start with a city report, a city notice, or a police call, and the city site is where Redmond puts the public side of that work. It keeps the search tied to Redmond and helps you move from a name to the right office.

These search details usually help most at the start:

  • Exact legal name, including hyphens or apostrophes
  • DOC number if you have it from a notice or file
  • Current facility or last known custody point
  • City police report or incident clue

Redmond Released Inmates Images

The Redmond city site at redmond.gov is the source for the first city image and is the city's main public front door for notices and services.

Redmond Released Inmates city official website

That matters because the city site is where Redmond posts news, translation access, and public updates that can help a release search stay local.

The Redmond Police Department page at redmond.gov/police is the source for the second city image and gives the local public safety side of the search.

Redmond Released Inmates police department page

That page matters because it gives the city a clear police contact point, along with crime report tools, crime stats, and common resources that can help when a release search starts with a police record.

Redmond Released Inmates Records

Washington jail and release records are split between the public register and the fuller file that sits with the court or agency. Under RCW 70.48.100, the jail register is open to the public and must include the name of each person confined, along with the time, date, and cause of confinement, plus the time, date, and manner of discharge. That gives you a fast clue when you are tracking Redmond released inmates. It can also stop short of the full story.

The Public Records Act at RCW 42.56 gives you the next step when the register is not enough. Agencies must respond within five business days by providing the record, giving you a link, estimating the time needed, or denying the request with a reason tied to the law. The statute matters when you need older jail records, release paperwork, or a case file that the roster does not show. If the issue turns into criminal history, RCW 10.97.030 separates public conviction data from restricted non-conviction data.

The Washington State Courts directory at courts.wa.gov/court_dir/?fa=court_dir.county helps you find the right clerk when the release came from a court order or a criminal case file. Court clerks in King County maintain the official records of criminal proceedings, including charging documents, judgments, sentencing orders, and any release orders issued by the court. The broader courts page at courts.wa.gov is useful when you want statewide forms and access tools for a request or a follow-up search.

Most useful record clues include:

  • Jail register date and discharge line
  • Court order or sentencing order
  • DOC facility and earliest release date
  • Police report or records request number

Note: In Redmond, the jail register often gives the first clue, but the clerk file and public records request usually decide how much of the release trail you can see.

Redmond Released Inmates Alerts

For live notice of custody changes, VINE at vinelink.com/#/state/WA is the cleanest tool. It sends free, confidential alerts by phone, email, or TTY when a person is released, transferred, escapes, or dies. In Washington, VINE covers most county jails and the Department of Corrections, so it stays useful even when the custody trail crosses from county to state or back again. That makes it a strong follow-up after a DOC search, especially when you need to know whether a release is current and not just old record text.

The DOC contact page at doc.wa.gov/about-us/contact-us gives you the agency path for current and former incarcerated individuals and supervisees. That matters when the public search is not enough and you need the office that can handle a fuller request. If you need a criminal history check instead of a jail record, the Washington State Patrol page at wsp.wa.gov/crime/criminal-history/ explains WATCH, mail, and in-person options, along with the fee schedule. The WSP contact page at wsp.wa.gov/about-wsp/contact/ gives you the agency route if you need help with a state record.

The Redmond Police Department page also helps here because it gives the public report-a-crime tools, crime statistics, and commonly requested resources. That makes it a useful local page when a release search starts with a police call or a city incident and then moves into county jail or state custody records.

Redmond Released Inmates Contacts

When the city record is thin, the best move is to keep the city pages close and then step into county and state contacts. The Redmond city site at redmond.gov is the local front door for notices and public updates. The police page at redmond.gov/police is the local safety page to check when a record or notice points back to city police. Those two pages help you keep the search grounded before you move to outside systems.

For county and state follow-up, the courts directory, DOC, VINE, WSP, and the Attorney General public records page work well together. One source shows current custody. Another shows the alert path. A third helps you find the clerk. That combination is usually enough for Redmond released inmates because the record trail often crosses more than one office. If you keep the request narrow and the name exact, you have a better shot at the right file on the first pass.

Use the county court directory for King County if the record is tied to a local court case, and use the state contacts when the county trail turns into a prison or supervision record. That is the cleanest way to search Redmond released inmates without losing the local thread.

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