Brown County Busted Mugshots

Brown County Busted Mugshots searches often start with the sheriff, jail, and circuit court. In Brown County, those records can help you find a booking date, a custody update, or a case number tied to an arrest. Some details show online fast. Older files may take a call or a written request. If you are trying to confirm a recent booking, track a case in Green Bay, or ask for a copy of a record, the county and city offices below are the right places to begin.

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Brown County Busted Mugshots

The Brown County Sheriff's Office page at browncountywi.gov/departments/sheriff/ is the best place to start when you want Brown County Busted Mugshots information tied to patrol, jail, or civil process work. The office is led by Sheriff Todd Delain and serves from 2684 Development Drive in Green Bay. It handles investigations, court security, the detective division, the marine unit, SWAT, K-9 work, traffic, and community programs. That mix matters because a booking record can start with one office and end in another.

The Brown County Sheriff's Office page at browncountywi.gov/departments/sheriff/ gives the first official image below and shows the agency that handles patrol, jail, and booking records.

Brown County Busted Mugshots sheriff office

That office is where many people begin when they want a current status update or a name check tied to a recent arrest. If the name is common, the date of the stop or booking helps a lot.

The Brown County Jail at browncountywi.gov/departments/sheriff/divisions/the-jail/ keeps the jail side of the record. It houses about 750 inmates, accepts 24-hour intake, and offers an online inmate search. Brown County also uses video visitation through ICSolutions, kiosk deposits, Access SecurePak, on-site medical and mental health care, and a Huber center for work release. Classification happens within 24 hours, and release processing is part of the same record trail. When a person is booked, that paper trail can move fast, but the county still keeps the core file.

Note: Brown County online views help with recent custody checks, but the full case file and older booking detail still sit with the jail or clerk.

Brown County Sheriff and Jail

The Brown County Jail page at browncountywi.gov/departments/sheriff/divisions/the-jail/ shows how much work lives behind a single mugshot or booking number. The jail manages intake, release, classification, and the daily flow of custody records. That matters for Brown County Busted Mugshots searches because the jail is the office most likely to know whether a photo, charge, or housing status has been posted yet. If you are calling, keep the person's full name and the date in hand. It saves time.

The Brown County Jail page at browncountywi.gov/departments/sheriff/divisions/the-jail/ also appears as the second county image below. It is the clearest public source for the jail side of the record.

Brown County Busted Mugshots jail records

That jail page explains intake, online search, video visits, and release processing.

A Brown County booking record can include the full name, booking number, booking date and time, charges, bail, court date, physical details, and a mugshot when it is available. The jail also supports video visitation, phone access, property handling, and screened mail, so the same file often touches more than one unit. If you need a copy or a more exact match, the sheriff's office and jail staff can usually point you toward the right request path.

  • Full name of the person booked
  • Booking number or inmate ID
  • Booking date and time
  • Charge list or offense description
  • Bail or bond status
  • Court date, if one has been set

That booking detail is useful, but it is not the whole story. If a case is still open, the sheriff and jail may have a fresh record while the clerk of courts has the long-term case file. Brown County's online inmate search helps with current status, yet older images and older sheets may still require a direct request.

Brown County Court Records

The Brown County Clerk of Courts at browncountywi.gov/departments/courts/ handles criminal, civil, family, probate, juvenile, and traffic records from 100 S. Jefferson Street in Green Bay. The office phone is 920-448-4155, and the public hours are Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. That office is where a Brown County Busted Mugshots search turns into a case file search. It is also where you can ask about copies, certified copies, and older docket material.

The Brown County Clerk of Courts page at browncountywi.gov/departments/courts/ anchors the third county image below. It is the office that keeps the court file connected to the booking trail.

Brown County Busted Mugshots court records

That clerk office is where the docket, the copies, and the certification process all come together.

Brown County court copies cost $1.25 per page, and certified copies add $5. The clerk also supports eFiling, and the court system offers online payment through wcca.wicourts.gov/payOnline.html. If you need help filing or reading a form, the Wisconsin Courts portal at wicourts.gov and the clerk directory at wicourts.gov/courts/circuit/clerk.htm are the right statewide backups. Interpreters and ADA accommodations are available, and restraining order files may need extra care because access can be narrower than a normal case file.

The court file is where the record becomes fixed. It shows the charge, the hearing path, the orders, and the final result. A mugshot may start the search, but the court file is what gives the arrest a lasting shape.

Green Bay Busted Mugshots Context

Green Bay adds another layer to the search. The Green Bay Police Department at greenbaywi.gov/departments/police-department/ keeps its own records desk and online reporting tools at 307 S. Adams Street. That office is separate from the Brown County Sheriff's Office, so a city arrest report and a county jail booking can point to different custodians. When you know the arrest happened in Green Bay, that city page can save time and stop the wrong phone call.

That split matters because the county and city do different jobs. The sheriff handles county custody and jail work. The police department handles city incidents and its own report requests. If you are comparing a city arrest report to a county booking photo, keep both offices in view. Wisconsin public records law gives you a path to ask, but the right office still depends on who created the record. Start close to the event, then move outward if the first search comes up short.

The cleanest Brown County Busted Mugshots search usually starts with the sheriff, then moves to the jail, then ends at the clerk if you need copies.

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