Search Calumet County DUI Records

Calumet County DUI Records are usually spread across the clerk, the sheriff, and the state systems that hold court summaries and driver history. WCCA is the fastest way to confirm the case number and status, while the county clerk has the underlying file and can provide certified copies. If you are trying to piece together an OWI stop, a crash report, or a later court hearing, the safest approach is to start with the public docket and then move to the office that keeps the full record. That keeps the search local and specific.

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Calumet County Overview

$1.25 Copy Fee Per Page
Circuit Court Type

Calumet County Clerk Office

The Calumet County Circuit Court keeps the official court file for DUI and OWI matters. The office is at 206 Court Street in Chilton, and the clerk can be reached at (920) 849-1458. That office keeps the case file, the docket, and the certified records that are not fully visible on WCCA. For a local DUI search, that is the place to ask when you need a case copy, a hearing date, or a certified judgment. The county research also notes that historical court records go back to 1877, which can matter if you are researching an older file or a family name that appears in more than one generation.

The county government page for Calumet County Circuit Court is the official source named in the research. It notes that the clerk maintains all circuit court records and that the circuit court handles criminal prosecutions including OWI cases, along with civil, family, probate, and traffic matters. That makes the clerk the central office for any Calumet County DUI record request that needs a full file rather than a summary search result.

The State Law Library directory for Calumet County resources is also useful because it points to the local clerk, sheriff, district attorney, register in probate, register of deeds, and family court commissioner. When a DUI matter overlaps with family court or another county file, that directory helps you sort out where the rest of the paper trail lives.

Calumet County records are easy to confuse if you only use one source. WCCA shows the public docket. The clerk holds the file. The sheriff may hold the arrest report. The DOT holds the driver history. Each office answers a different question, and the record search is smoother when you keep those roles separate.

Calumet County DUI Records Fees

Calumet County uses the same standard Wisconsin copy fees as most other counties. Standard copies are $1.25 per page and certified copies add $5.00 per document. The county research does not list a special surcharge for ordinary copy requests, but it does make clear that certified copies come from the clerk's office. If you need a court-certified record, the clerk is the office to contact rather than the sheriff or the law library.

The county government page and the State Law Library directory both point to the clerk of courts as the office that can provide access to forms and records. That makes the clerk the most direct route for a DUI case file. If you are requesting a larger set of pages, it is smart to ask whether the office wants payment in advance. That is a common practice for county record requests and it helps keep the request moving once the search is done.

For driver history, use the Wisconsin DOT driving record request page instead of the court file. That record shows suspensions and revocations tied to the license, including OWI-related entries. If the issue is a refusal, a revocation, or an occupational license question, the DOT's OWI license suspension page is the official place to look. Those materials are not a substitute for the court file, but they are often needed to understand the whole case.

Tip: A case number makes everything easier. Calumet County record searches are faster and cleaner when the clerk does not have to guess which OWI file you mean.

Calumet County OWI Process

Wisconsin's OWI law is Wis. Stat. ยง 346.63. That statute controls the criminal side of the case in Calumet County. The circuit court handles the charge, the clerk keeps the file, and the DOT handles the license effect. When a person searches Calumet County DUI Records, it helps to think of those as three separate records that work together, not one all-purpose file.

The county court research also shows that Calumet County has maintained court and related public records for a long time, with older probate, land, and court materials stretching well back into the county's history. That background matters because it shows how established the local record system is. The clerk's office is still the right stop for the actual DUI file, but the research context helps explain why Calumet County recordkeeping is so structured and consistent.

For people studying the law, the Wisconsin State Law Library's Drunk Driving Resources page gives a state-level overview of OWI law, forms, and related research. The Calumet County directory on the law library site adds the local office names, which is handy when a DUI case intersects with probation, family court, or probate. That combination of state and county sources is the cleanest way to move from general rules to a specific local file.

Local arrest records in Calumet County usually start with the sheriff. The sheriff office section on Calumet County Government says the office keeps arrest records, incident reports, and jail records and accepts public records requests. That makes it the place to ask when the DUI search needs the stop report, booking information, or other local law enforcement material. If the case involved a crash, the DOT crash system is still the source for the accident report.

Calumet County Records Help

The Calumet County law library directory is the best local map for the offices that might hold a DUI-related record. It gives you the clerk, sheriff, district attorney, register in probate, register of deeds, and family court commissioner in one place. That matters because the record trail is often split. For statewide background checks, the Wisconsin DOJ Crime Information Bureau is the official source for name-based criminal history searches.

Use WCCA first, then the clerk, then the sheriff if you need a local incident report. If the question is about the driver's license after the case, go to the DOT. That order keeps Calumet County DUI Records searches organized and avoids paying for the same information twice.

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