Search New Berlin Warrant Records

New Berlin Warrant Records usually begin with the city police wanted list and then move to Waukesha County when the matter becomes a court or enforcement question. If you already have a name and a rough date, the city page can help you start fast. If the record is already in county court, the sheriff and court tools give you the rest of the trail. That mix is useful in New Berlin because the city is small enough for a direct call to still work well, but the county side matters when you need the case history instead of just a name on a list.

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The New Berlin Police Department at 16300 W. National Avenue, New Berlin, WI 53151, is the first office many people use when they need New Berlin Warrant Records tied to a local incident. The phone number is (262) 782-6640, and the department says it publishes a wanted list on the city website. The research also notes that the list is updated regularly and that callers can contact the department for warrant verification. That makes the police page the fastest first stop when you know the name but not the case number.

The city route is especially useful when the case began with a neighborhood complaint, a traffic stop, or another local call that never felt large at the time. The wanted list gives you a current look at the city side of the record, while a direct call can tell you whether the matter still needs police attention or whether you should move on to county court. New Berlin Warrant Records work best when you use that first city step before you shift to the county search tools.

Because the research does not point to a separate city court page, the county route becomes the next natural step once the police check is done. That is common in New Berlin. The city gives you the lead, and Waukesha County gives you the docket, enforcement, and court-copy path if the case has moved beyond the city list. That split keeps the search focused and makes it easier to ask the right office for the right record.

New Berlin Police Warrant Records

The New Berlin Police Department page at newberlin.org/police-department is the city-side source that matters most when your New Berlin Warrant Records search starts with a local name check. The wanted list is public, it is posted on the city website, and the department says it is updated regularly. That means the page is good for a current status check, not just an old archive. If you only need to know whether a warrant is still being listed by the city, that page is the right place to start.

The police office is also the best contact point when the record is still a city matter and you want to know whether you should call Waukesha County next. A direct conversation with the department can help you decide whether the file is a simple wanted-list item, a more detailed incident file, or a matter that has already shifted into county court. That matters because New Berlin Warrant Records may look simple on the surface while still requiring a second office to explain the full history.

If the warrant trail began with a city stop or a city complaint, the police department is where the trail starts. If the trail already points to a county case, the police office can still tell you whether the city has enough information to confirm the record before you move on. That kind of early check prevents a lot of wasted time and keeps the search tied to the office that actually owns the first piece of paper.

Waukesha County Warrant Records for New Berlin

When New Berlin Warrant Records leave the city side, Waukesha County becomes the next place to check. The Waukesha County Sheriff's Office is at 515 W. Moreland Boulevard, Waukesha, WI 53188, and the phone number in the research is (262) 548-7122. The sheriff handles warrant verification and county enforcement questions, which makes that office the strongest county contact when you need to know whether a warrant is active, whether it has turned into a custody issue, or whether it belongs to a circuit-court case instead of a city list.

The Waukesha County Sheriff's Office page at waukeshacounty.gov/sheriff/ is the source shown in this image and the county enforcement path most likely to matter for a New Berlin warrant search.

Waukesha County sheriff records for New Berlin warrant records

Use it when you need active warrant verification or a county enforcement answer.

The county side matters in New Berlin because the same warrant question can move through several suburbs at once. The research gives one example from March 2026 where a Waukesha County judge issued an arrest warrant on March 2 in a burglary investigation tied to New Berlin, Brookfield, West Allis, and Wauwatosa. That example shows why the county office is important even when the city police page is the first stop. County enforcement does not stay inside one city line.

The Waukesha County WCCA portal at wcca.wicourts.gov is the source shown in this image and the most direct county court check for a New Berlin Warrant Records search.

Waukesha County WCCA search for New Berlin warrant records

That portal helps you confirm whether the matter is already sitting in circuit court.

The Waukesha County portal at waukeshacounty.gov is the source shown in this image and a useful county entry point when you want to move from a city wanted list to the broader county record structure.

Waukesha County portal for New Berlin warrant records

It gives you a clear county starting point when the search needs more than a police phone call.

The Waukesha County Law Library page at wilawlibrary.gov/topics/county.php?c=Waukesha is the source shown in this image and a simple county guide when you want a plain explanation of the record path before you call anyone.

Waukesha County law library guidance for New Berlin warrant records

That guide is useful when you want the search order in plain language.

Getting Copies of New Berlin Warrant Records

If you need copies of New Berlin Warrant Records, the best path depends on whether the record is still a city wanted-list item or whether it has moved into county court. The police department is the first place to check for the city side, while the sheriff and WCCA portal are the safer county tools for a docket or enforcement record. That distinction matters because a copy request should go to the office that actually holds the document, not just the office that knows the person's name.

Waukesha County is usually the better place for the actual court copy once the matter has moved out of the city. The portal helps you see which office to ask, the sheriff helps confirm active status, and the law library helps you understand the route before you file the request. That combination is especially useful in New Berlin because the city research is thin and the county record path does most of the heavy lifting.

When the search is about proof rather than just curiosity, start by confirming the case in WCCA or with the sheriff, then ask for the copy from the office that keeps the file. That keeps you from guessing, and it keeps the request tied to the record source instead of to a generic county office that may not have the right paper in front of it.

Wisconsin Rules for Warrant Records

New Berlin Warrant Records sit inside Wisconsin's statewide criminal procedure and public-records system. Wis. Stat. Chapter 968 covers criminal proceedings and warrants, Chapter 969 covers bail and release, and Chapter 19 covers public records. Those chapters explain why a wanted list, a court docket, and a copy request can all point you to different parts of the same case.

The Wisconsin court system at wicourts.gov and the circuit eFiling page at wicourts.gov/ecourts/efilecircuit/index.jsp are useful when a New Berlin case moves into circuit court. They help you see how the county side is organized before you call the clerk or sheriff. That is a practical step in a city like New Berlin where the police list may be public, but the full record still sits with the county.

The Wisconsin State Law Library search page at wilawlibrary.gov/topics/justice/crimlaw/search.php is useful background when you want the legal side of a warrant search before you make the call. It is not the record itself, but it helps explain why a county office may ask for a case number, a date, or the specific type of record you want. For New Berlin searches, the cleanest path is still city first, county second, copy request last.

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