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Common Questions About Public Records in Monrovia

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

⚰️ Where do I order a death record in Los Angeles?
Death records for Los Angeles County come from three offices sharing the same database. (1) LA County Department of Public Health, Vital Records Office at http://publichealth.lacounty.gov/dca/dcadeath.htm — issues death certificates for deaths registered in LA County. (2) LA County Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk (RR/CC) at https://www.lavote.gov/home/records/death-records — alternate ordering channel; RR/CC has recorded LA County deaths since 1877. Headquarters at 12400 Imperial Highway, Norwalk CA 90650, phone (562) 462-2137. (3) California Department of Public Health (CDPH), Vital Records at https://www.cdph.ca.gov/Programs/CHSI/Pages/Vital-Records-Obtaining-Certified-Copies-of-Death-Records.aspx — slower (4–6 weeks) but covers any California death. Fee (effective Jan 1 2026 under AB 64): $26 per certified copy, fetal-death certificates also $26. Online ordering via VitalChek at https://www.vitalchek.com/v/vital-records/california/los-angeles-county-registrar-recorder — express shipping (~$15 service fee). Eligibility (Cal. H&S Code § 103526): spouse, parent, child, sibling, grandparent, grandchild, legal representative, person with documented direct interest. Photo ID required for authorized copies; Informational copies (not for legal use) available to anyone with sworn statement. Apostille for international use: get the certified copy first, then submit to California Secretary of State, 1500 11th St, Sacramento CA 95814. Free informal confirmations: Social Security Death Master File via FamilySearch.org, Find A Grave at https://www.findagrave.com, LA Times obituaries archive. Recent deaths: ~30-day delay from date-of-death until the record is available at the LA RR/CC; CDPH state office has a longer lag. Sources: LA County DPH, LA County RR/CC, CDPH, AB 64 (2025), Cal. H&S Code § 103526.
Tagged: Los Angeles County · death
🚔 What's the source for arrest records in Los Angeles?
Los Angeles County arrest records sit with whichever law-enforcement agency made the booking. Five-source playbook: (1) LASD Inmate Locator at https://app5.lasd.org/ — current detainees countywide across the LA County jail system (Men's Central, Twin Towers, CRDF, North County). General custody questions: (213) 473-6100. LASD Booking Log at https://app5.lasd.org/bklog/ for registered users (journalists, attorneys, government). (2) City PD arrest blotters for arrests inside city limits — LAPD Adult Arrests / Crime Mapping at https://www.lapdcrimemap.org and bulk download at https://data.lacity.org; LBPD, Pasadena PD, Glendale PD, Burbank PD, Santa Monica PD, Beverly Hills PD, Inglewood PD, Long Beach PD, Torrance PD, El Monte PD, Pomona PD, etc. (3) Court records for arrests that produced a charge — LA County Superior Court at https://www.lacourt.org, free public name search; covers all 50+ courthouses. (4) State prison (sentenced felons): California Department of Corrections inmate search at https://inmatelocator.cdcr.ca.gov. (5) Personal authoritative criminal history: California DOJ Live Scan at https://oag.ca.gov/fingerprints — fingerprint-based Personal Record Review, $25 state fee plus rolling fee. Older arrests (pre-2000): file a written CPRA request to the originating agency under Cal. Gov. Code § 7920. Statewide aggregator (private): California Jail Roster at https://californiajailroster.com. What's NOT released: juvenile records (always sealed except for serious-offense disclosures), sealed/expunged matters, identifying victim/witness info in sex offenses or DV cases (Penal Code § 6254(f)). Booking photos public per Penal Code § 13300; body-cam OIS footage releasable within 45 days under SB 1421 / AB 748. For employment use: vendors (Checkr, Sterling, GoodHire) wrap state, FBI, court, county, and MVR into one FCRA-compliant report. Sources: LASD, LAPD, LA County Superior Court, CDCR, California DOJ, Cal. Gov. Code § 7920.
Tagged: Los Angeles County · arrest
How can I find out about the deadlines for having any drug charges reduced to misdemeanors?
California drug-possession charge reclassification runs through Proposition 47 (2014, effective Nov 5, 2014) and Penal Code § 1170.18. What Prop 47 did: reclassified most simple-possession drug offenses (Health & Safety Code §§ 11350, 11357, 11377) from felony to misdemeanor, regardless of when the conviction was entered, plus several non-violent property crimes under $950 (theft, shoplifting, forgery, bad checks, receiving stolen property). The deadline to petition for resentencing or reclassification was originally November 4, 2022 (8 years after passage), but California has extended it indefinitely for those who can show 'good cause' for late filing — there is now no hard deadline, but earlier filings get faster review. How to file in LA County: (1) Free representation through the LA County Public Defender's Prop 47 unit at https://pubdef.lacounty.gov/prop47-faqs/, phone (213) 974-2811. (2) DIY: complete forms CR-180 / CR-181 at the Clerk of the Superior Court in the originating courthouse (Stanley Mosk, Long Beach, Pomona, etc.). Filing fee: $0 if currently in custody or eligible under Cal. Penal Code § 1170.18(g); otherwise standard ~$60 motion fee, waivable under FW-001. (3) DA review: prosecutor has 15–60 days to oppose; if granted, the conviction is reduced to a misdemeanor on your record. Eligibility limits: excluded if you have prior 'super-strike' convictions (PC § 667(e)(2)(C)(iv)) or are a registered sex offender under PC § 290(c). Newer relief tools: Proposition 36 (2024) re-classified some drug-possession offenses back to felony status with treatment alternatives — Prop 47 reclassifications obtained before Prop 36 are NOT reversed. Resources: California Policy Lab Resentencing Brief at https://capolicylab.org; California Courts Prop 47 FAQs at https://courts.ca.gov; Liberty Criminal Defense / Wegman & Levin Prop 47 guides. Strong recommendation: work with the Public Defender or a criminal-defense attorney — eligibility is fact-specific. Sources: California Penal Code § 1170.18, Proposition 47 (2014), LA County Public Defender, California Courts FAQ, California Policy Lab.
Tagged: Los Angeles County · general
How can I obtain records of my criminal report?
To obtain records of your own criminal report in California, two routes depending on what you actually need. Path one — official statewide criminal history record review (Personal Record Review of your DOJ file). Fingerprint-based; runs through the California Department of Justice (DOJ) at https://oag.ca.gov/fingerprints. (1) Get a Live Scan capture at any local vendor (LAPD Records 100 W 1st St, LASD Records 4700 Ramona Blvd Monterey Park, IdentoGO, Certifix, A1 Live Scan); find one at https://oag.ca.gov/fingerprints/locations. (2) Complete BCIA 8016RR form at https://oag.ca.gov/fingerprints/record-review. (3) Pay $25 California DOJ state fee plus rolling fee ($20–$50 at vendor); FBI national check adds the federal fee. Fee waiver at https://oag.ca.gov/fingerprints/record-review/fee-waiver. Turnaround 5–10 business days; results mailed only — no email/PDF. Path two — local police incident or arrest report (the actual report officers wrote during your contact). File a CPRA request directly with the originating agency (LAPD, LBPD, Pasadena PD, etc.) under Cal. Gov. Code § 7920 — agencies must respond within 10 calendar days. As the direct party named in the report, most fees are waived; bring photo ID. LAPD report copy: $29 (https://www.lapdonline.org/get-a-copy-of-a-police-report/); other cities $5–$30 depending. Path three — court filings if charges were filed: LA County Superior Court at https://www.lacourt.org — free public name search. What's NOT released: active investigations, juvenile records, sealed/expunged matters, identifying victim/witness info in sex offenses or DV cases (Penal Code § 6254(f)). Body-cam footage: officer-involved shootings releasable within 45 days under SB 1421 / AB 748. For accuracy challenges: if your DOJ record contains an error, file form BCIA 8706 to dispute. Sealing: if eligible under PC § 851.91 (arrest without conviction) or PC § 1203.4 (post-conviction expungement), the record can be sealed/restricted. Sources: California DOJ, LAPD, LA County Superior Court, Cal. Gov. Code § 7920, Penal Code § 851.91.
Tagged: Los Angeles County · general
🚗 Where do I order a DMV driving record in California?
California DMV driving records are restricted under the federal Driver Privacy Protection Act (DPPA) — you can pull your own freely, but third parties need a permissible use. Two ways to order your own record (https://www.dmv.ca.gov/portal/customer-service/request-vehicle-or-driver-records/): (1) Online via MyDMV at https://www.dmv.ca.gov/portal/customer-service/request-vehicle-or-driver-records/online-driver-record-request/ — free unofficial copy of your driver record viewable instantly with your MyDMV account; certified copies require the mail-in form. (2) By mail or in person — complete Form INF 1125 (Request for Your Own Records) at https://www.dmv.ca.gov/portal/file/inf1125-pdf, pay $5 per certified driving record by check/money order payable to DMV, mail to: Department of Motor Vehicles, Public Operations Division, MS G199, P.O. Box 944247, Sacramento CA 94244-2470. Vehicle/vessel registration records also $5 per record. Photo records (driver license/ID card photo) $20/year. Allow 7–10 business days. Driver record types: H6 (10-year commercial), H1 (3-year non-commercial — most common for personal review), H8 (lifetime). Third-party access (insurance, employers, attorneys) requires INF 70 with permissible-use justification under Vehicle Code § 1808 — fees and turnaround are the same. For accident reports, those go through the responding law-enforcement agency, NOT the DMV. For court traffic case info (citations, dispositions): use the county Superior Court — California Courts directory at https://www.courts.ca.gov/find-my-court.htm. Online vendors: third-party services charge $20–$40 above DMV fees and pull the same H1 record. Sources: California DMV, INF 1125 form, Vehicle Code § 1808, federal DPPA (18 U.S.C. § 2721).
Tagged: California · driving
📋 How can I find out if someone has an outstanding warrant in California?
California warrants are issued by the courts and held by the local law-enforcement agency that will serve them — there's no single statewide warrant database open to the public. Five reliable sources: (1) County Sheriff's online warrant search — many counties publish active-warrant lists. San Diego County Sheriff at https://apps.sdsheriff.net/warrant/ has a searchable Warrant Query by Name (or call the Warrant Office at 858-974-2110); LA County, Orange County, Riverside, San Bernardino, Sacramento, Fresno, Alameda, Santa Clara, Kern all publish their own lists or take phone inquiries. (2) Court records at the county Superior Court — every filed case shows whether a bench warrant has been issued for failure to appear. California Courts directory at https://www.courts.ca.gov/find-my-court.htm; LA Superior Court at https://www.lacourt.org. (3) Most Wanted lists: California DOJ at https://oag.ca.gov; OC Sheriff Most Wanted at https://ocsheriff.gov; LASD, SDSO, SFPD, and most county sheriffs publish a Most Wanted page. CRIMEWATCH California at https://crimewatch.net/us/ca/most-wanted aggregates many. (4) U.S. Marshals Profiled Fugitives at https://www.justice.gov/action-center/identify-our-most-wanted-fugitives for federal warrants on California soil. (5) Phone the local agency — for a definitive answer, call the sheriff's warrant division or city PD records line for the area where the alleged conduct occurred or where the person lives. What won't show up: confidential warrants in active investigations, sealed indictments, juvenile-court warrants, and many low-level municipal warrants. Quash a warrant: most courts allow a Motion to Quash that re-sets a hearing date for around $32–$60 motion fee — significantly better than getting picked up at a traffic stop. Strong recommendation: if a warrant might be out for you, retain a defense attorney before walking into a station. Voluntary surrender on planned terms — bond posted in advance — beats a traffic-stop arrest. Sources: San Diego County Sheriff, OC Sheriff, California DOJ, U.S. DOJ Wanted Fugitives, CRIMEWATCH California.
Tagged: California · warrant
🏠 How do I look up property records in California?
California has no statewide property database — each of the 58 counties runs its own Recorder and Assessor offices. You'll usually deal with two offices for any given parcel. (1) County Recorder for the actual recorded documents (deeds, deeds of trust, releases, liens, plats, surveys). Most counties offer free online document search — examples: LA County RR/CC at https://www.lavote.gov/home/recorder; San Diego at https://www.sdarcc.gov; Orange County at https://cr.ocgov.com; San Francisco at https://www.sfassessor.org; Sacramento at https://assessor.saccounty.gov; Alameda at https://www.acgov.org/auditor/clerk/; Santa Clara at https://clerkrecorder.sccgov.org; Riverside at https://www.asrclkrec.com. (2) County Assessor for parcel valuation, ownership, and parcel maps — same county sites typically host both. (3) County Treasurer-Tax Collector for tax-payment status. Recording fees statewide (per Cal. Gov. Code § 27361): base $13 first page + $3 each additional; +$75 SB 2 fee per non-exempt real estate transfer (Building Homes and Jobs Act). For typical 1-page deed, plan on ~$88 first page. Documentary Transfer Tax: $1.10 per $1,000 of value, plus city-specific local taxes (LA Measure ULA adds $4.50 per $1,000 for transfers under $5M; SF charges 0.5%–6% sliding scale). Certified copies $5 + $0.50 per page. Statewide aggregators (paid services covering all 58 counties): ParcelQuest at https://www.parcelquest.com (~13 million parcels updated daily); California Property Records at https://californiapropertyrecords.us; U.S. Title Records at https://www.ustitlerecords.com/california/. Free statewide directory: California State Board of Equalization at https://www.boe.ca.gov/proptaxes/assessors.htm lists every county Assessor. Property fraud alert: most county Recorders offer free email notification when documents record under your name. Sources: ParcelQuest, California Property Records, Cal. Gov. Code § 27361, California State Board of Equalization.
Tagged: California · property

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

Monrovia, California · Public Records

Monrovia Public Records, Court Cases & Arrests

Search court records, arrest information, criminal history, and police reports for Monrovia, located in Los Angeles County, California. All records linked here come from official government sources.

Records access in Monrovia

Law enforcement in Monrovia is primarily handled by the Monrovia Police Department. The department keeps detailed arrest records and criminal records accessible to the public, under California law. Individuals looking to search for inmate records or request background checks can do so through the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department website or visit the local police department directly. Monrovia is also within the jurisdiction of the Los Angeles County Jail system, where individuals who are arrested may be detained. The proximity of the Monrovia Police Department to the community fosters a strong relationship between residents and law enforcement, which is crucial for effective policing. Residents of Monrovia can request public records under the California Public Records Act (CPRA) by contacting the appropriate offices depending on the type of record needed. Vital records, including birth, death, and marriage certificates, can be obtained through the Los Angeles County Clerk's office, either in person or via their online portal. For property records, the Los Angeles County Assessor's office provides necessary information about property ownership and value assessments. Those seeking court records can access them through the Los Angeles County Superior Court's website, where many documents are now available online, ensuring that residents have a streamlined process for obtaining essential records. Monrovia's commitment to transparency and accessibility of public records serves to help with informed citizen engagement.

Crime statistics · Monrovia, CA · FBI UCR 2024

Reported offenses for the Monrovia jurisdiction, total population 38148. Source: FBI Uniform Crime Reporting program.

Violent crimesProperty crimes
Total: 135
Murder & non-negligent manslaughter: 2
Rape: 13
Robbery: 54
Aggravated assault: 75
Total: 1126
Burglary: 187
Larceny / theft: 800
Motor-vehicle theft: 139
Arson: 10

Reporting period: calendar year 2024. Numbers reflect offenses known to law-enforcement agencies serving Monrovia.

Monrovia · Population & demographics

Total population36590
White59.9%
Black or African American6.8%
Asian11.2%
Hispanic or Latino (any race)38.4%

Source: U.S. Census Bureau decennial count.

California Public Records Act

Records held by Monrovia city offices, the Los Angeles County Sheriff, and the Los Angeles County Superior Court are subject to the California Public Records Act (Cal. Gov. Code § 7920 et seq.). Agencies must respond within 10 calendar days. Booking photos and arrest information are public per Sacramento Bee v. Yuba County and Penal Code § 13300. Body-cam footage related to officer-involved shootings is releasable within 45 days under SB 1421 and AB 748.

Where to file a records request in Monrovia

Police records: file with the Monrovia Police Department or via the Los Angeles County Sheriff for unincorporated areas.

Court records: Los Angeles County Superior Court handles criminal, civil, family, and probate matters. Felonies and most misdemeanors flow through the Superior Court system.

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