Search Auburn Recent Bookings

Auburn Recent Bookings usually begin with the city records request lane and the SCORE jail path, then move to court follow-up if the matter has already shifted out of the city. Auburn does not run its own jail, so the first step is to match the record type to the office that actually holds it. If you already know the name, date range, or incident context, you can check the roster, ask for the police file, and keep the request focused. That makes the search more direct and helps you avoid sending a broad ask to the wrong desk.

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Auburn Recent Bookings Search

The City of Auburn routes public records requests through its public records request page at auburnwa.gov/how_do_i__/request/public_record. The city responds through GovQA, and the request can move by mail or through the online portal. Auburn also uses reference number tracking so you can follow the request after it is filed. If you need the office that handles city records, the City Clerk page at auburnwa.gov/city_hall/legal_city_clerks is the right local starting point. That matters for Auburn Recent Bookings because the records path is more useful when it is tied to the correct office from the start.

Auburn estimates complex requests can take 30 to 35 calendar days. Police-related records may be sent in installments, which means the first release can include police reports, CAD incident reports, and photos, while later releases can include body camera footage. That sequencing is important for Auburn Recent Bookings because it tells you that the first package may not be the whole file. The city also allows records to be picked up, reviewed on site, or delivered through GovQA, and the request may close if an installment is not claimed within 30 days under RCW 42.56.120(4).

The King County sheriff page at kingcounty.gov/sheriff is the source for the fallback image below.

Auburn Recent Bookings King County sheriff office fallback

Use that county image when Auburn booking research needs a broader public custody frame rather than a city-only record path.

Requesters should also expect production fees only when allowed by law. The important part is not the fee itself. It is the fact that Auburn wants the request narrow enough to route cleanly and specific enough to fit the right installment. A good Auburn Recent Bookings request names the record type, the date range, and any names or incident details that can keep the search from wandering.

Auburn Recent Bookings Jail and Court Paths

Auburn does not have its own city jail. The city uses South Correctional Entity, or SCORE, for inmates, and the Auburn jail page at auburnwa.gov/city_hall/police/jail-score explains that shift clearly. The City of Auburn inmate roster is available online through the city search tool at Search Loved Ones. It is searchable by last name and can show the booking date, charges, arresting agency, bond amount, and scheduled release date. That is the fastest public check for Auburn Recent Bookings when the question is still custody, not court.

That roster matters because Auburn uses a regional jail model. The roster can tell you whether a person is currently at SCORE and give you the booking trail in a form the city can support. If the arrest turns out to be a county matter or a serious transfer, the next step is often the King County jail lookup at kingcounty.gov/sheriff/jailinmates. The county page at King County Recent Bookings is a useful tie-in when the custody path leaves Auburn and enters a broader county file.

Courts matter too. Auburn's community court page at auburnwa.gov/city_hall/legal/community_court is useful when a low-level case is routed into a local problem-solving track instead of a straight jail sentence. That is not the same thing as a police roster or a jail record. Still, it gives Auburn Recent Bookings a practical court follow-up point if the arrest becomes part of a diversion or community court process. The trail can move from custody to court very quickly in a city this size.

Auburn Recent Bookings Police Records

Auburn Police records are handled through the city records process and the police records unit. The Auburn Police Department records page at auburnwa.gov/city_hall/police/records/ says the Records Unit is open Monday through Friday, 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., with a midday closure on the third Wednesday of each month. It also points people to the non-emergency dispatch line and the Property and Evidence line. That is useful for Auburn Recent Bookings because the report copy, the follow-up call, and the evidence question do not always sit in the same mailbox.

Records Division details also matter. Auburn lists Deputy City Clerk Hannah Scholl, CMC, the public records line at 253-931-3039, and the records phone at 253-931-3007. Those contacts help when a request needs clarification or when a police record is being split into installments. Auburn says police-related records can start with reports, CAD incident reports, and photos, then later move into body camera footage. That staged release lines up with RCW 42.56.240 when the request involves body camera material and specific incident identification.

The police side is where Auburn Recent Bookings can slow down if the request is too broad. The city wants enough detail to find the correct event and enough patience to process the later installments if they are separated. A clean request usually includes the name, date range, incident location, and the type of report you want. If the request involves a booking record, that clarity helps the records unit decide whether the file belongs in the first installment or the later video release.

Auburn Records Resources

These official sources keep Auburn Recent Bookings tied to the city, SCORE, and the county follow-up paths that actually hold the record. Start with the public records request page, then move into the police records unit or the jail roster as needed. If the matter lands in court, Auburn's local court pages and the county route are usually the better next step than a broad web search.

Auburn Recent Bookings are easiest to follow when you keep the request lane separate from the custody lane. The city records page, the police records page, the SCORE page, the inmate search tool, and the city clerk office are the core city sources. Use them in that order so you do not ask one office for a record held by another.

For court or county follow-up, Auburn Recent Bookings work best when you let each office do the part it actually controls. The county jail, the county page, the Attorney General guide, and the jail-record rule all help, but they only matter once the custody trail leaves Auburn or the case has moved into a different office.

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