Burien Recent Bookings Lookup

Burien Recent Bookings are handled through King County because Burien contracts with the King County Sheriff's Office for police services and does not have its own police department. That means the search starts with the county system, not a separate city jail or city records desk. If you know the name, date of birth, incident date, or the type of records you need, you can keep the request focused and local. Burien is easier to track when you treat the city contact, the county booking record, and the court follow-up as one connected trail instead of a single file.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Burien Recent Bookings Search

The King County Sheriff's Office public disclosure unit is the main place to start for Burien Recent Bookings. The phone is (206) 477-2620, the email is SHRpublicrecords@kingcounty.gov, and the online portal is available for request submission and tracking. That setup is useful because Burien uses county police services, so the county office owns the arrest-side trail. The cleanest request is the one that tells staff exactly who and what you are asking for. The county should acknowledge the request within five business days under RCW 42.56.520, which keeps the process moving even when the search is broad at first.

Burien's police contact is still worth keeping in the file. The address is 14905 6th Ave SW, Burien, WA 98166, and the non-emergency line is (206) 296-3311. That contact gives you the city side of the record trail, even though the city does not run its own department. If the arrest started in Burien, the county request still works better when you keep the city name in the request and pair it with a date or incident reference. The county staff can then route the file without guessing at the wrong event.

For a recent booking, the county usually needs the full name of the subject, the date of birth if known, the date and location of the incident, the type of records sought, and the incident number if you have it. That is a strong set of facts because it keeps the request tied to one person and one event. If the request is for a copy rather than an inspection, the same details still matter. Burien Recent Bookings are much easier to track when the request reads like a precise record request instead of a broad question.

Burien Requests and Records

King County accepts Burien requests through its online request system and by email, which helps when you want a written trail. The county also notes that records are subject to a five business day acknowledgment window. That is important because a recent booking can move quickly from arrest to custody, and then the record may sit with multiple offices at once. A focused request keeps the county from having to interpret a vague description. If you already know the subject's name and the approximate date, lead with that. If you know the incident number, include it. Those details save time on both sides.

Burien requests also have a follow-up rule in the county research. Under RCW 42.56.120(4), records can be closed after 30 days if they are not claimed. That makes it smart to keep an eye on the portal or email thread once the county responds. The point is not to overwhelm the office. The point is to keep the request active, specific, and easy to match to the right booking. Burien Recent Bookings are much easier to read when the request stays narrow from the start.

If you need a county records copy, the King County public disclosure office is the right place to ask. If you need the arrest context, the county sheriff site is the better door. The county also keeps the public records path and the jail lookup connected, which helps when a booking is only one step in a larger case file. That is the main pattern for Burien. City contact, county booking, then court.

Burien Recent Bookings Jail Paths

Burien uses King County Jail, including the King County Correctional Facility in downtown Seattle and the Maleng Regional Justice Center in Kent. That means a Burien booking may show up in either county custody location depending on where the person was routed. The county's inmate lookup is the fastest public way to confirm custody and see whether a person is still in jail or has already moved. When the person is in county custody, the booking record becomes the key source for current status, while the city or county police file explains the arrest.

The county jail lookup at kingcounty.gov/sheriff/jailinmates is the official custody check for Burien Recent Bookings. It is useful because King County has more than one adult custody path, and a live lookup can show where the person is held. The county sheriff page at kingcounty.gov/sheriff also gives you the wider office that anchors the jail, the public records request process, and the disclosure desk. That is the county side of the trail that matters most once the arrest has been booked.

When the booking turns into a case, court records are the next step. The county court system and the Washington statewide court search can confirm whether the arrest has become a filed matter. For a Burien search, that keeps the record chain honest. The arrest, the custody entry, and the court file are not the same record, even if they all point to the same person. Treating them separately helps you avoid a dead end and gives you a better read on the actual booking trail.

Burien Recent Bookings Images

The King County Sheriff's Office page at https://www.kingcounty.gov/sheriff is the source for the fallback image below.

Burien Recent Bookings King County sheriff office fallback

That county office is the correct fallback because Burien relies on King County for police services and booking custody.

Burien Public Records and Follow-Up

If the request moves beyond the basic booking check, the next step is often a copy of the incident report or a related court file. The King County public disclosure unit can route records requests to the right office, but the request still has to be tight. Full name, date of birth if known, date and location, the type of records, and the incident number if available are enough to anchor the search. That level of detail is what keeps Burien Recent Bookings useful instead of vague.

For court follow-up, the statewide case search at dw.courts.wa.gov is useful once a booking has turned into a case. The Washington Courts forms page at courts.wa.gov/forms can help if you need a form for a later filing or a record follow-up. The Attorney General's public records guide at atg.wa.gov/obtaining-records is another solid official source when you want to understand the request path in plain language. Those state tools do not replace King County, but they help you read the trail once the booking leaves the jail and moves toward court.

Burien Recent Bookings work best when the county disclosure office, the jail lookup, and the court file are kept in order. That sequence matches how the record moves in real life and keeps the search local to the agencies that actually hold it.

King County Sheriff's Office, King County Jail Inmate Lookup, King County public disclosure email, King County courts and legal system, King County District Court, Washington Courts case search, and Washington Attorney General records guide are the main official follow-up sources for Burien Recent Bookings.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results