Cleveland People Search Guide

Cleveland People Search works best when you treat the city, the county, and the state as three parts of the same trail. The police department at 150 Church Street SE holds reports. City Court at 190 Church Street NE holds traffic and ordinance cases. Bradley County offices at 155 Broad Street NW hold the wider court and clerk records that often come next. If you start with the right office, you can move from a name to a docket, and from a docket to the copy that actually proves what happened. That local chain keeps the search practical and helps with common names.

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Cleveland Quick Facts

Bradley County
150 Church Police Records
190 Church City Court
155 Broad County Courthouse

Cleveland People Search Records

The Cleveland Police Department is located at 150 Church Street SE and keeps incident reports, accident reports, and arrest records. The records division is typically open Monday through Friday from 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM, and the department lists Records at (423) 476-1121 ext. 2. An in-person request with valid Tennessee identification is the usual starting point, especially when you already know the date or place. Accident reports are available to involved parties, and some information is available through the department website. That makes the police desk a fast first step in a Cleveland People Search.

Cleveland City Court at City Hall, 190 Church Street NE, handles traffic citations and city ordinance violations. The office phone is (423) 476-8930. Fine payments can be made online, by mail, or in person, and warrant information is handled through the court clerk. If the name appears on a citation, a missed docket, or a local ordinance case, the city court can tell you whether the matter is still open. That can save a lot of time before you move to the county file.

The city and police offices work together in a way that makes the trail easier to follow. A report number can lead to a court date, and a court date can lead to a county case. When you use the local record first, you know exactly which Bradley County office to ask next, and the Bradley County Sheriff at (423) 728-7300 can help when the arrest trail moves from the city desk to the jail side of the record.

The Bradley County court portal at bradleyco.net/circuit-court-clerk helps you see where the broader case file lives.

Cleveland People Search Tennessee court records portal

That portal is useful when you need to sort the case type before asking for the full copy. It keeps the search tied to the right office instead of the wrong desk.

Cleveland People Search and Bradley County

The Bradley County Circuit Court Clerk maintains the civil and criminal records that often follow a Cleveland city lead. The office is at the Bradley County Courthouse, 155 Broad Street NW in Cleveland, and it handles civil cases over $25,000, felony criminal cases, divorce proceedings, and appeals. The clerk can be reached at (423) 728-7222, and case information is available through the Tennessee Court Information System, which is useful when you want to confirm the case before you ask for a copy. That puts the city and county records into one clear line.

The Bradley County Clerk is another important stop. It keeps marriage licenses, business licenses, vehicle registrations, notary commissions, and other official records at the courthouse, and the office number is (423) 728-7220. That can help when a person first appears in a marriage record, a vehicle record, or a county file that sits beside a city case. A Cleveland People Search gets cleaner when the county clerk and circuit clerk are both part of the process.

Bradley County Sheriff records can also matter when a city arrest leads to a jail placement or a longer case trail. If you know the booking date or arrest location, the county side can help you follow the record without guessing at which office owns it. That is especially useful when the police report is local but the inmate record lives with the sheriff instead of the city desk.

Use the county courthouse as the next step when the city records only give you a clue. It is the office that turns a local name check into a case copy.

Cleveland People Search and State Records

Some Cleveland People Search requests need a state backstop. Tennessee Vital Records can provide certified copies for marriage and divorce when the local file is not enough or when the record must be confirmed outside the courthouse. That matters when you need proof that is easier to carry than a case summary. It also helps when the local record is not the final answer, especially in older files where the courthouse index is easier to find than the paper copy.

The Tennessee Office of Open Records Counsel explains the records process when a request needs more detail before you file it. The Tennessee State Library and Archives can help with older records and records that have moved off site. Those archives are especially useful when a local clerk says the file exists, but not in the room you expected. That is common with older records and long-running county files, and it is why a Cleveland People Search should always check the local office before it leans on the state copy.

The state court portal at tncrtinfo.com is the best statewide check before you ask for the paper file. It helps confirm the case type, which keeps you from asking the clerk for the wrong record family.

Cleveland People Search Tennessee State Library and Archives

It can help with older indexes and archived references when a city record points to a county record that is no longer on the main desk.

Cleveland People Search Next Steps

Start with the office that owns the record type. Police reports stay with the police department. Traffic and city ordinance cases stay with City Court. Civil and felony files stay with the circuit clerk. Marriage and vehicle records stay with the county clerk. That simple order keeps a Cleveland People Search efficient and reduces the chance of getting sent back to the wrong office. It also gives you the right phone number and address before you request copies, which matters when a file needs valid identification or a precise docket date.

When the trail gets older, use the state tools to confirm the file location and the record type. That keeps the local request focused and helps the clerk understand exactly what you need. It is the fastest way to get from a lead to the right copy.

If you only have a plate number, incident date, or docket note, include it with the request. Small details like that often turn a vague lead into the exact Bradley County file you need.

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