Find Redmond Warrant Records

Redmond warrant records often start at the municipal court, but the search can move into King County or a statewide tool when the local page is not enough. That happens because Redmond cases may be short on detail at first glance, then open up once you check the court calendar, the clerk request path, or a county case file. If you are checking a warrant, trying to see whether a hearing is still open, or asking for a copy, start with the city court and then widen the search if the record points somewhere else.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Redmond Warrant Records at Municipal Court

Redmond Municipal Court is the main city office for local warrant work. The court is at Redmond Municipal Court, 8708 160th Ave NE in Redmond, and the phone number is (425) 556-2700. The court handles municipal ordinance violations and misdemeanors. It keeps weekday hours from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM and runs court sessions on Tuesdays and Thursdays. That gives you a clear place to start when the matter is still inside city court.

The court page also notes online payment at redmond.gov/pay, warrant quash scheduling by phone, a public records request form, copy fees of $0.25 per page, interpreter services, ADA access, traffic school, community service, continuances in writing, discovery through the clerk, and payment plans. Those details matter because a Redmond warrant may be tied to a missed appearance, a fine, or a hearing that needs to be reset before the file can move on.

Redmond warrant records are easier to read when you keep the court path in front of you. Some files are short. Some are not. Either way, the court page is the first stop when you want to see whether the case is active, postponed, or ready for a copy request.

Redmond Warrant Records Search Options

Redmond warrant records searches work best when you bring exact facts. A full name is useful. A case number is better. A date of birth, citation number, or court date can help even more. If you only know the person was in Redmond, that still gives the court a place to begin. But the more exact the search, the less likely you are to chase the wrong file.

Redmond is in King County, so county tools often fill the next gap. The King County Clerk and KC Script are the main county access points. KC Script supports search by case number or party name and includes warrants, motions, judgments, and adult criminal records from November 1, 2004 forward. That is useful when a city warrant points toward a county file or a longer docket trail.

It is also worth remembering that a Redmond search can move between offices. The city court may hold the original matter. The county court may hold the wider docket. The sheriff or jail may hold the live status. If you keep all of those in the same chain, you are less likely to stop too early.

  • Use the city court for the local record and request form.
  • Use KC Script when the case looks like a county file.
  • Use the county clerk when you need a certified copy.
  • Use the sheriff when active warrant status matters.
  • Use state tools when you need a broader Washington check.

Redmond Court Dates and Records

Court dates matter because a warrant can shift after a hearing. Redmond Municipal Court keeps sessions on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and that schedule helps you tell whether the matter is current or already reset. If the case spills into King County, the district court calendar can add the next hearing date. That gives you a simple way to see whether the file is still live or whether the court already took the next step.

King County District Court is useful because it handles misdemeanor, gross misdemeanor, and traffic cases. If a Redmond file moves beyond the city page, the district court can show the next appearance or the record that points to the next office. That is especially helpful when a quick web search gives you only part of the trail.

When you need a broader calendar check, Find My Court Date can search district and municipal courts statewide. The main Washington Courts site also gives public case access. Those state tools are useful when the city page does not tell you enough or when you want to see how the Redmond matter fits into a wider court path.

Redmond Warrant Records Copies

Copy fees in Redmond are easy to plan for. Plain copies cost $0.25 per page. If you need a warrant page, a docket sheet, or a small set of records to check at home, that keeps the cost low. If another office needs a formal copy, ask how the request should be sent and whether the clerk wants the case number on the form. A narrow request usually gets a faster response.

Redmond also offers payment plans, which matters if the warrant is tied to a fine or a missed court obligation. The court's continuance process and discovery access can help explain what the case needs next. If the record is not open online, the public records request form is still the right path to ask for the public portion of the file.

King County copy rules can matter too if the Redmond matter moved into the county system. The county clerk and KC Script may add clerk-assisted copies, online copy pricing, research time, and electronic delivery. That means a Redmond search can start with a city copy and end with a county file if the broader docket sits there.

King County Warrant Records for Redmond

Redmond sits in King County, so county offices often fill the gaps after a city search. The county sheriff at King County Sheriff can verify active warrants by name and date of birth, and the jail lookup can show whether the matter has turned into a booking or a hold. That is useful when the live status is more important than the old paper trail.

The county clerk and district court also matter because a city case can become a county hearing or a county copy request. Redmond warrant records are easier to track when you follow them from the city office into the county office instead of treating each search as a new start. That keeps the trail straight and helps you avoid duplicate requests.

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

Statewide Warrant Records Tools

The official Redmond Municipal Court page at Redmond Municipal Court anchors the local screenshot below, which shows the city court source tied to this page.

Redmond Warrant Records at Redmond Municipal Court

That local view matches the way Redmond warrant searches usually begin, at the municipal court before a county or state follow-up.

State tools still matter when the city page is thin or the same name appears in more than one court. Washington DOC warrant search lists outstanding Secretary's Warrants in a public table, and WSP WATCH can add a paid statewide pass when you need a broader check.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results