Search Bothell Warrant Records

Bothell Warrant Records usually start at Bothell Municipal Court, where city ordinance violations and misdemeanor matters are heard. If you need to verify a warrant, find a court date, or ask for a copy, begin with the city court and then widen the search if the file points somewhere else. Bothell sits near county lines, so some cases need a second look through statewide tools before the whole trail is clear. A name, case number, or citation number can keep the search from drifting and help you reach the right record faster.

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Bothell Warrant Records at Municipal Court

Bothell Municipal Court is at Bothell Municipal Court, 18410 101st Ave NE in Bothell, and the phone number is (425) 806-6110. Research notes show the court handles city ordinance violations, misdemeanors, traffic infractions, and misdemeanor traffic matters. It keeps weekday hours, runs a weekly schedule, and allows warrant quash work by scheduling with the clerk. That makes it the first stop when a Bothell warrant starts as a city case rather than a county one.

The court also offers fine payment online and in person, a public records request path in writing, copy fees of $0.25 per page, interpreter services, ADA access, community service, written continuances, discovery to the court clerk, payment plans, and public access to records. Those details matter because a warrant can sit beside a payment problem, a missed appearance, or a hearing note. If you know the case is municipal, the court can usually tell you what step comes next.

Bothell warrant work moves best when the case facts are narrow. If you have a full name and a date, the court can often tell you whether the file is open, reset, or waiting on a clerk step.

Bothell Warrant Records Search Options

The best Bothell Warrant Records search starts with the facts you already have. A full name is useful. A case number is better. A citation number or hearing date helps even more. If you have a date of birth, add that too. The city court can narrow the file faster when the request is specific, and that keeps a simple search from turning into a long back-and-forth.

State tools can help when the city record is thin. Washington Courts gives free public case access, and Find My Court Date can search district and municipal calendars statewide. Those tools matter when a Bothell matter has already been reset or when the same name shows up in another court. They also keep the search moving while you wait for a records response.

For Bothell, the practical rule is simple. Check the city court first. Then move to the statewide tools if the local result leaves a gap. That order keeps the search tied to the actual record instead of a guess.

  • Use the city court for local case questions.
  • Use the public records path when you need a copy.
  • Use statewide calendars when the next hearing is unclear.
  • Use a date of birth or citation number when you have it.

Bothell Warrant Records and Court Dates

Warrant quash work in Bothell is handled by scheduling with the clerk, so a phone call can matter as much as a search screen. The court runs weekly sessions, which means the calendar can move faster than an old printout. If the record is still active, a hearing date is often the quickest clue. If the matter has already been reset, the clerk can usually point you to the next step.

That is why Bothell Warrant Records work better with a court date than with a broad name search alone. A case can be open, reset, or waiting on another appearance, and the calendar tells you which one is true. If the city result looks incomplete, Washington Courts and Find My Court Date can help you compare the local result against other Washington calendars before you call again.

If you are trying to clear a warrant, keep the date, the case number, and the name together. That keeps the court conversation short and reduces the chance of asking for the wrong file.

Bothell Warrant Records Copies

Copy fees in Bothell are straightforward. The court charges $0.25 per page, and the public records request process is in writing. That helps when you only need a docket page, a warrant note, or a short record that confirms what the court did. Certified copies are not listed in the research notes, so if you need a certified record, ask the clerk how the office wants that handled before you file a request.

The public records route also lines up with RCW 42.56, which gives the formal path for written requests and inspection when the record is open. That matters because a warrant file can include supporting papers that are more useful than the short online entry. A narrow request saves time and keeps the response tied to the exact case you need.

If the city file sends you elsewhere, write down the court name and case number before you move on. A clean paper trail makes the next request easier to answer.

State Tools for Bothell

The Bothell Municipal Court source page matches the local screenshot below, which keeps Bothell Warrant Records tied to the city court before you move to broader tools.

Bothell Warrant Records at Bothell Municipal Court

This local image fits because Bothell warrant searches usually begin with the municipal file, then expand only if the record points to another office.

How Bothell Records Move

Bothell warrant records usually move from the municipal court to a statewide or county-level check only when the city file does not answer everything. That order matters because each office handles a different part of the record. The court shows the hearing or quash path. The public records request shows the documents behind the entry. The statewide tools help when the same name appears in more than one court.

If you start with the city court, the search usually stays shorter and clearer. If the record is active, the court date may be the most useful clue. If the record is not on the city page, the state tools help you decide whether the warrant is still current or whether it has already been reset.

Note: Bothell warrant status can change after a hearing, so confirm the current record before you rely on an older printout.

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