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Common Questions About Public Records in Scottsdale

Real questions from people researching records in Scottsdale. Each answer is verified against official agency sources — no third-party services.

⚖️ What's the right place to search court cases in Maricopa?
Maricopa County court cases run through three layers; the right portal depends on case type. (1) Maricopa County Superior Court — felonies, divorce, probate, civil cases over $10,000, juvenile (sealed), family. Search the official Docket at https://www.superiorcourt.maricopa.gov/docket/index.asp — name, case number, attorney, judge. The Superior Court handles ~250,000 new filings per year and is the largest in the state. (2) Maricopa County Justice Courts — civil under $10,000, eviction, small claims, traffic, misdemeanor citations. There are 26 Justice Court precincts; case lookup at https://justicecourts.maricopa.gov/app/courtrecords/casesearch. Pick the right precinct (Kyrene, Arrowhead, Encanto, etc.) by the address where the citation issued. (3) Municipal Courts — city ordinance and traffic cases inside city limits: Phoenix Municipal at https://www.phoenix.gov/courts (often the highest volume), Mesa, Chandler, Glendale, Scottsdale, Tempe, Peoria, Surprise — each has its own portal, all linked from https://justicecourts.maricopa.gov. Statewide consolidator: Arizona Judicial Branch Public Access at https://apps.azcourts.gov/publicaccess/caselookup.aspx wraps all three. Limits: sealed, juvenile, and expunged cases not visible. Document copies: $0.50/page uncertified, certified copy $30 first page + $0.50 each additional. Sources: Maricopa County Superior Court, Maricopa County Justice Courts, Arizona Judicial Branch.
Tagged: Maricopa County · court
🚔 How do I look up an arrest in Maricopa?
Maricopa arrests sit with whichever agency made the booking. Order of speed: (1) Maricopa County Sheriff's Office (MCSO) Inmate Locator at https://www.mcso.org or 602-876-1011 — current inmates across the 9,000-bed jail system (4th Avenue, Lower Buckeye, Towers, Estrella, Durango). Updated continuously; searchable by name. Non-emergency line 602-876-4636. (2) City police arrest logs for arrests inside city limits: Phoenix PD Adult Arrests Dashboard https://stories.opengov.com/phoenixaz/published/8g516L4Wc; Mesa PD, Scottsdale PD, Tempe PD, Glendale PD, Chandler PD, Peoria PD, Surprise PD all maintain blotters. (3) Court filings for any arrest that produced a charge: Maricopa County Superior Court https://www.superiorcourt.maricopa.gov/docket/index.asp; Justice Courts https://justicecourts.maricopa.gov/app/courtrecords/casesearch. (4) Older arrests / closed cases: written records request to MCSO Records Division (550 W Jackson St, Phoenix, 602-876-1801) under A.R.S. § 39-121, copy fees apply. (5) State prison: Arizona DOC inmate search https://corrections.az.gov/inmate-data-search. For your own personal arrest record, fingerprint-based AZ DPS Personal Review at https://psp.azdps.gov ($22 first / $7 each additional). Sources: MCSO, Phoenix Police Open Data, Maricopa Superior Court, AZ DOC.
Tagged: Maricopa County · arrest
🏢 Where do I find business records in Maricopa?
Arizona business registrations are split between two state agencies, depending on entity type. (1) Corporations, LLCs, partnerships, nonprofits — registered with the Arizona Corporation Commission (ACC), 1300 W Washington St, Phoenix AZ 85007, phone (602) 542-3026. Free public search at https://ecorp.azcc.gov/EntitySearch — returns status, formation date, statutory agent, principal address, officers/managers, annual reports, and document images. (2) Trade names (DBAs), trademarks, sole proprietorships — registered with the Arizona Secretary of State, 1700 W Washington St, Phoenix AZ 85007. Search at https://apps.azsos.gov/apps/tntp/se.html. (3) Filed business documents (Articles of Incorporation, mergers, amendments) at https://efiling.azcc.gov/public-records — image downloads free. (4) Phoenix/Maricopa city-level business licenses — City of Phoenix at https://www.phoenix.gov/finance/plt; Mesa at https://www.mesaaz.gov; each city issues its own privilege/transaction tax license. (5) Statewide TPT (Transaction Privilege Tax) license — Arizona Department of Revenue at https://aztaxes.gov; required for most retail/service businesses. Tip: when checking before doing business, run BOTH ACC and SOS — many DBAs aren't with ACC. Sources: AZ Corporation Commission, AZ Secretary of State, AZ Commerce Authority.
Tagged: Maricopa County · business
🚔 Where do recent arrests show up in Arizona?
Recent Arizona arrests show up in three layers, in order of speed. (1) Within hours — county jail roster. The county sheriff books and lists everyone in custody on a public roster, usually updated continuously: MCSO https://www.mcso.org (Maricopa, 602-876-1011); PCSD (Pima); Pinal https://www.pinal.gov/1636/Inmate-Search; Yavapai https://apps.yavapaiaz.gov/inmatesearch/; Mohave; Yuma; Coconino; Cochise; etc. Statewide private aggregator at https://recentbookings.arizonaofficialrecords.com/. (2) Within 24–48 hours — city police arrest blotter for arrests inside city limits. Phoenix PD Adult Arrests Dashboard at https://stories.opengov.com/phoenixaz/published/8g516L4Wc (data from 2018 forward, downloadable). Tucson, Mesa, Chandler, Glendale, Scottsdale, Tempe, Peoria, Surprise, Prescott, Flagstaff, Yuma all maintain similar logs. (3) Once a charge is filed (1–5 days): Arizona Judicial Branch Public Access at https://apps.azcourts.gov/publicaccess/caselookup.aspx — searches all 15 counties' Superior, Justice, and most Municipal courts. Sentenced state inmates: Arizona DOC at https://corrections.az.gov/inmate-data-search. Personal record: AZ DPS Personal Review at https://psp.azdps.gov, $22 first / $7 each additional, fingerprint-based. Sources: AZ DPS, MCSO, Phoenix Police Open Data, AZ Judicial Branch, Arizona DOC.
Tagged: Arizona · arrest
⚰️ Where do I order a death record in Arizona?
Arizona death certificates are issued by the Arizona Department of Health Services (ADHS), Bureau of Vital Records, P.O. Box 3887, Phoenix AZ 85030, phone (602) 364-1300, https://www.azdhs.gov/vital-records/. Fee: $20 per certified copy under A.A.C. R9-19-105 (older sources still cite $10 — the rate increased recently). Three ordering channels: (1) Online via VitalChek at https://www.vitalchek.com/v/death-certificates/arizona/arizona-vital-records — 3–5 business day express shipping plus a ~$15 service fee. (2) County Vital Records office in the county where the death occurred — Maricopa at https://www.maricopa.gov/5995/Order-a-Birth-or-Death-Certificate, Pima at https://www.pima.gov/186/Vital-Records, Yavapai at https://www.yavapaiaz.gov/Resident-Services/Health-Services/Community-Health-Services/Health-Services/Birth-and-Death-Services. Same $20 fee. (3) Mail to ADHS Bureau of Vital Records — allow 4–6 weeks. Eligibility (A.R.S. § 36-342): spouse, child, parent, sibling, grandparent, grandchild, legal representative, person with documented direct interest. ID required. Amendments / corrections to a death certificate: $30. Apostille for international use: get the certified copy first, then take it to the Arizona Secretary of State at 1700 W Washington St, Phoenix. Funeral home tip: if the death is recent, the funeral director typically orders certificates as part of arrangements — usually 5–10 copies are needed for accounts, insurance, and probate. Sources: AZ DHS Vital Records, Maricopa County Vital Records, VitalChek, A.A.C. R9-19-105.
Tagged: Arizona · death
🧹 What's the process to clear a criminal record in Arizona?
Arizona offers three different criminal-record relief mechanisms — each does something different. (1) Set Aside (A.R.S. § 13-905) — the longest-standing tool. Once you've completed all conditions of sentence (including probation, fines, restitution), you can petition the original sentencing court for a Set Aside. If granted, the judgment of guilt is set aside, the complaint/information/indictment is dismissed, and you're released from all penalties — but the underlying record remains visible. Useful for employment background checks because the disposition shows 'set aside.' Most misdemeanors and many felonies qualify; serious offenses (DUI with injury, sex offenses against minors, dangerous offenses) are excluded by statute. (2) Sealing (A.R.S. § 13-911) — Arizona's newer (effective 2023) tool. Petition the court to seal ALL case records of the arrest, conviction, and sentence. If granted, the records are not visible to the public, employers, or background-check vendors (with narrow exceptions for law enforcement and licensing boards). Eligibility runs on a wait period after sentence completion: 2 years for Class 2/3 misdemeanors, 3 years for Class 1 misdemeanors, 5 years for Class 4/5/6 felonies, 10 years for Class 2/3 felonies. (3) Expungement under the same § 13-911 — actually vacates marijuana convictions and a few others (including possession under 2.5 oz). Vacated = treated as if never happened. Petitions are filed at the Clerk of Superior Court in the county where the case originated; AZ Judicial Branch Self-Help Center at https://www.azcourts.gov/selfservicecenter/Criminal-Law/Sealing-records/Completing-the-Petition has the petition forms (Packets 13B, 14, 15). Filing fee for sealing/set-aside: $0 in many cases (waiver under § 13-911(N)) or $32 standard motion fee. Always work with an attorney — eligibility is fact-specific. Sources: A.R.S. § 13-905, A.R.S. § 13-911, AZ Judicial Branch, Bnt AZ Law, Arja Shah Law.
Tagged: Arizona · expungement

Have a question about records in Scottsdale? The agencies that hold these records are listed throughout this page — start there.

Scottsdale, Arizona · Public Records

Scottsdale Public Records, Court Cases & Arrests

Search court records, arrest information, criminal history, and police reports for Scottsdale, located in Maricopa County, Arizona. All records linked here come from official government sources.

Records access in Scottsdale

The Scottsdale Police Department maintains law and order in the city, managing everything from traffic violations to serious crimes. Arrest records and criminal records are systematically documented and can be requested by the public, for public access in local law enforcement activities. For those interested in inmate records, the Maricopa County Jail and detention facilities serve to house individuals awaiting trial or sentencing. Background checks can be initiated through the Scottsdale Police Department, which provides forms and instructions on its website, while the Maricopa County Sheriff's Office oversees the broader region, offering additional resources for residents seeking criminal history information. Scottsdale has a lower crime rate compared to other urban areas, which contributes to its reputation as a secure place to live and visit. Residents of Scottsdale can access a variety of public records through established procedures under the Arizona Public Records Law. The Maricopa County Clerk's Office is the go-to resource for vital records, including birth, death, and marriage certificates, which can be requested in person or via mail. Property records are available through the Maricopa County Assessor's Office, where residents can view parcel information online. Court records can be accessed through the Maricopa County Superior Court, which offers an online portal for civil and criminal case files. This array of resources allows residents to navigate public information easily and ensures transparency within the local government.

Crime statistics · Scottsdale · FBI UCR 2024

Reported offenses for the Scottsdale jurisdiction, total population 260464. Source: FBI Uniform Crime Reporting program.

Violent crimesProperty crimes
Total: 527
Murder & non-negligent manslaughter: 7
Rape: 136
Robbery: 143
Aggravated assault: 322
Total: 8138
Burglary: 1523
Larceny / theft: 5863
Motor-vehicle theft: 752
Arson: 31

Reporting period: calendar year 2024.

Scottsdale · Population & demographics

Total population217385
White89.3%
Black or African American1.7%
Asian3.3%
Hispanic or Latino (any race)8.8%

Source: U.S. Census Bureau decennial count.

Arizona public records law

Records held by Scottsdale city offices, the Maricopa County Sheriff, and the Maricopa County courts are subject to the Arizona Public Records Law (A.R.S. § 39-121).

Where to file a records request in Scottsdale

Police records: file with the Scottsdale Police Department or via the Maricopa County Sheriff for unincorporated areas.

Court records: Maricopa County courts handle criminal, civil, family, and probate matters.

Booking and inmate records: Maricopa County Sheriff publishes a public inmate roster including booking photos and charges.