Klickitat County Released Inmates Lookup
Klickitat County released inmates are easiest to track when you begin with the state custody record and then move into county and court records only as needed. That keeps the search tight and local. It also fits Klickitat County well, since the county site is mostly a front door for notices and basic service links, while the state tools do the real work of showing custody, release, and supervision history. If you already have a DOC number, the path is short. If you only have a name, the same state tools still help you narrow it down without guessing at the wrong office or the wrong county file.
Klickitat County Overview
Klickitat County 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 Klickitat County 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 the person's 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 name field is strict, so the spelling matters. DOC says special characters other than hyphens and apostrophes cannot be used. If the first pass does not hit, try the DOC number or strip the name down to the core parts. The page also notes that all information is subject to the agency's disclaimer and terms of use. For older history, DOC says the public can submit a records request for more release and supervision information than the public search shows on its own.
These 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
- Earliest possible release date shown by DOC
Klickitat County Released Inmates Image
The Klickitat County website at klickitatcounty.org is the source for the county image below and is the best public front door to county notices and service links.
That local site is useful because Klickitat County posts general updates there, and those notices can help you keep a release search tied to the county rather than a broad state scan.
Klickitat County Released Inmates Records
Washington law splits jail information into a public part and a private part. Under RCW 70.48.100, the jail register is open to the public and must show the name of each person confined, along with the time, date, and cause of confinement, plus the time, date, and manner of discharge. That public register can give you the first clue about a release. It does not always show the full file behind it.
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 specific reason. The law also limits charges for inspection and electronic access. If the issue turns to criminal history, RCW 10.97.030 matters because conviction information is public while non-conviction data stays limited to criminal justice agencies.
The Washington State Courts directory at courts.wa.gov/court_dir/?fa=court_dir.county is the court-side bridge. Court clerks keep criminal proceedings, judgments, sentencing orders, and release orders. If a Klickitat County release came from a court case, the clerk file can explain the path much better than a short custody line ever will.
Note: In Klickitat County, the jail register is the quick clue, but the clerk file and public records request usually decide how much of the release trail you can see.
Klickitat County Released Inmates and VINE
VINE at vinelink.com/#/state/WA is the live alert tool for Klickitat County released inmates. It is free, anonymous, and sends custody status updates 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 matters in a county like Klickitat because the public may need to follow a record through more than one office. A release can shift into a state file or a supervision record, and VINE is the easiest way to catch the change without checking each site by hand. The offender does not know who registered for notice, and one user can keep more than one registration active. That makes the system practical for victims, family members, and anyone who wants a quiet alert path.
DOC also says the public can contact the agency for information about current and former incarcerated individuals and supervisees. If VINE confirms the change but not the deeper record, that DOC contact path becomes the next step. It keeps the search tied to the record, not to guesswork.
Klickitat County Released Inmates Contacts
The DOC contact page at doc.wa.gov/about-us/contact-us points to the public records officer and the agency path for current and historical inmate data. DOC says its headquarters is in Tumwater and that it serves as the central records custodian for state incarcerated people. That matters when a Klickitat County search reaches the point where the public result is not enough and you need the office that can handle a fuller request.
The Washington State Patrol contact page at wsp.wa.gov/about-wsp/contact/ is the next step for criminal history questions. The WSP criminal history page at wsp.wa.gov/crime/criminal-history/ explains the WATCH online option, mail requests, and in-person requests in Olympia. It also explains the fee structure and the difference between conviction data and restricted non-conviction data. That matters when you compare a release record to a criminal history record.
The Attorney General public records page at atg.wa.gov/our-work/public-records is useful if a request is denied or stalled. The broader courts page at courts.wa.gov gives you statewide forms and access tools. Those pages are the best backup when the county or state office points you back to the Public Records Act instead of handing over the full file.