Search Delaware 24 Hour Booking

Delaware 24 Hour Booking logs show who was taken into custody in the last day. You can look them up through state and local channels. Delaware has three counties and a small set of municipal police agencies that share booking data through one central system. To search Delaware 24 Hour Booking records, you can use state tools for warrants, the inmate locator, and court case portals. Each county and city also has its own contact for records requests. Start with a name, a date, or a case number. Most results come back the same day.

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Delaware 24 Hour Booking Overview

3 Counties
9 State Police Troops
$72 SBI Record Fee
15 Business Days for FOIA

Booking data in Delaware sits with a few main agencies. The Delaware State Police run patrol and investigations from nine troops across the state. City police in Wilmington, Dover, Newark, Middletown, and other towns keep their own arrest logs. All of them feed data into the Delaware Criminal Justice Information System (DELJIS), which acts as the state's central hub for warrants, charges, and case tracking.

The Delaware State Police homepage is the best place to start. It links to the Sex Offender Registry, Wanted Persons Check, and news releases that cover recent arrests. The page also ties into the State Bureau of Identification for certified criminal history checks.

Look up the Delaware State Police homepage at dsp.delaware.gov to begin your search.

Delaware State Police homepage for 24 Hour Booking records

This portal links out to most of the state tools you need. It also lists troop numbers, news releases, and contact info for each location.

You will need some basic info to get a record. A last name is the least you need for most searches. A first name, date of birth, or case number helps narrow results. Fees vary by the type of record. Some lookups are free. Certified copies cost more. Timelines depend on the agency and the request method.

Note: Delaware 24 Hour Booking records are split across state, county, and city offices, so start with the arresting agency when you know which one made the stop.

Statewide Booking Search Tools

Delaware runs a public warrant search through DELJIS. The Wanted Persons Check lets you look up active capias or warrants by last name. First name is optional. The search hits warrants issued by Delaware courts. Recent changes may not show up right away. Do not try to detain anyone based on this data. Only sworn officers can make an arrest on a warrant.

Go to pubsrv.deljis.delaware.gov/WantedPublic to run a warrant search.

Delaware Wanted Persons Check for 24 Hour Booking

The form is simple. Type in a last name and click search. Results show up within seconds when there is a match.

Court Connect is the statewide case lookup tool. You can view civil and criminal dockets from courtconnect.courts.delaware.gov. Search by person name, business name, or case type. The system shows case status, charging documents, hearing dates, and docket entries. Public access terminals in each county courthouse also let you pull case files for free. Copy fees apply.

See Court Connect at courtconnect.courts.delaware.gov to find a case.

Delaware Court Connect portal for 24 Hour Booking case search

You can search by name, cause number, or business. The tool shows dockets from the Superior Court and other state courts.

Checking Arrest and Warrant Status

Delaware State Police encourage people to check their own wanted status online. The DSP post at dsp.delaware.gov/check-wanted-status walks you through the steps. If you find an active warrant in your name, contact the issuing agency. Most agencies will help set up a voluntary surrender. That can save you from being picked up at work or on the road.

View the DSP wanted status guide at dsp.delaware.gov.

Check wanted status for Delaware 24 Hour Booking

The guide points to the DELJIS public site and lists troop phone numbers. It also gives a tip line for Delaware Crime Stoppers at 1-800-847-3333.

Criminal History Records in Delaware

The State Bureau of Identification (SBI) runs the state's certified criminal history program. SBI uses fingerprints to verify identity. As of September 2023, fingerprint sites are open in Wilmington, Newark, Middletown, Dover, Milford, Georgetown, and Seaford. You book through IdentoGO at uenroll.identogo.com. Most partner sites keep weekend hours.

A state-only criminal history runs $72. A state-and-federal record runs $85 when the law calls for it. Service codes matter. The agency that asks for your record will give you one. A personal review uses code 27RVGT. An expungement check uses 27S23V. The fee for a plain set of printed fingerprint cards is $30. All payments go through the IdentoGO site at sign-up.

See the SBI criminal history page at dsp.delaware.gov/obtaining-a-certified-criminal-history.

Delaware criminal history background checks for 24 Hour Booking

The page lists each site, hours, and fees. It also has notes for foreign use of a certified record.

SBI data flows from a statute called Title 11, Chapter 85. Section 8502 of that chapter defines criminal history record information. It covers arrests, charges, and any disposition that comes from them. Section 8513 lays out who can see the data. You can always request your own record. Law enforcement, courts, the Office of Defense Services, and the Commissioner of Elections can also pull records for their work.

Delaware Department of Correction Records

The Delaware DOC Inmate Locator lets you look up the custody status of a sentenced offender. The service runs through VINELink, the National Victim Notification Network. You can sign up for phone, email, text, or TTY alerts. That way you get a notice when custody status changes. The DOC can adjust release dates for good time credits or a hold from another state. An offender may also serve more time at Level IV or on probation after a Level V sentence.

Find the DOC inmate locator at doc.delaware.gov.

Delaware DOC Inmate Locator for 24 Hour Booking

The page opens a link to VINELink. From there you can search by name or ID and set up alerts.

The Central Offender Records Unit holds the legal file for every person in state custody. This unit takes in new bookings, figures out sentence length, and coordinates release. It also handles subpoenas, DNA testing coordination, and victim notification letters. If you need a document from an old DOC case, the unit's inactive section can pull it.

Access the Central Offender Records page at doc.delaware.gov/central-offender-records.

Delaware Central Offender Records for 24 Hour Booking

The page lists the active and inactive sections and explains what each one does. Subpoena requests go through this unit.

Delaware Sex Offender Registry

Title 11, Sections 4120 and 4121 of the Delaware Code require the State Police to run a public sex offender registry. The registry is online at sexoffender.dsp.delaware.gov. It lists Tier 2 (moderate risk) and Tier 3 (high risk) offenders. Tier 1 offenders are not shown in public. You can search by name, address, city, county, or ZIP code. Each record includes a photo and a positive fingerprint match.

Open the Delaware Sex Offender Registry at sexoffender.dsp.delaware.gov.

Delaware Sex Offender Registry for 24 Hour Booking check

The registry updates each day. An email alert service is free to sign up for.

Offenders have to update their info within 3 days of any change. Failure to re-register is a Class G felony. Schools and daycare centers get a notice when a Tier 2 or Tier 3 offender registers in their area. Tier 3 notices also go to direct neighbors. The State Bureau of Identification runs the registry. Their mailing address is P.O. Box 430, Dover, DE 19903. Phone is (302) 739-5882.

Crime Data and Statistical Reports

The Delaware Statistical Analysis Center (SAC) collects crime data for the state. SAC puts out the yearly "Crime in Delaware" report. That report has offense counts, clearance rates, and arrest stats by county. Data goes back to 2008. You can pull reports for New Castle, Kent, and Sussex counties. The State Bureau of Identification feeds the raw data through NIBRS, the National Incident-Based Reporting System.

View the Statistical Analysis Center at sac.delaware.gov.

Delaware Statistical Analysis Center crime data for 24 Hour Booking

The site has recidivism studies, victim services info, and links to DELJIS and the Department of Correction.

The State Police also run a big public safety portal. It is called Keeping Delaware Safe. The site ties in with CrimeMapping.com. You can view crime data on a map. There are also sections on Crime Stoppers, the Delaware Information and Analysis Center, the Nextdoor program, and a homicide cold case database. Tips can be sent in through the portal.

Go to dsp.delaware.gov/keeping-delaware-safe to see this portal.

Delaware Keeping Delaware Safe portal for 24 Hour Booking

It pulls a lot of tools into one place. The Nextdoor link is helpful for neighborhood alerts.

Accessing 24 Hour Booking Through FOIA

Delaware's Freedom of Information Act covers most public records. The law is in 29 Del. C. ยงยง 10001 to 10007. The Attorney General's Open Government page is at attorneygeneral.delaware.gov/executive/open-government. That site has the standard request form, a list of rules, and the names of FOIA coordinators at each public body. Requests go to the coordinator at the agency that holds the record. The agency has 15 business days to respond.

See the Delaware FOIA resource page at attorneygeneral.delaware.gov.

Delaware FOIA resources for 24 Hour Booking requests

The page links to the online request portal, PDF forms, and a full list of exempt records.

FOIA does not apply to every record. Personnel files, medical files, trade secrets, and pending litigation records are out of reach. Section 10002 of Title 29 lists the exemptions in full. You can read the statute at delcode.delaware.gov/title29/c100. One key point for booking records: police investigatory files are not open under FOIA when release would hurt an investigation or invade a person's privacy. Still, most blotter-style records stay public.

Read the FOIA statute at delcode.delaware.gov/title29/c100.

Delaware FOIA statutes for 24 Hour Booking

The chapter runs through every rule. It sets the 15-day limit, the exemptions, and the web posting duties.

Criminal Records Law in Delaware

Title 11, Chapter 85 sets up the State Bureau of Identification. It also defines what goes into a criminal history record. You can read the chapter at delcode.delaware.gov/title11/c085/sc01. The statute leaves out a few kinds of records from the "criminal history" label. Police blotters that the law makes public stay open. Court records of public hearings are still open. DMV traffic files are not part of criminal history under this chapter.

Open the Title 11, Chapter 85 statute at delcode.delaware.gov/title11/c085/sc01.

Delaware Title 11 SBI statutes for 24 Hour Booking

The text lays out which agencies can pull records. Fees and user agreements are also covered.

To get a FOIA request form, visit sos.delaware.gov/foia-requests. The DOJ FOIA team is based at 820 North French Street, Wilmington, DE 19801. The phone is (302) 577-8400. The email is OpenGovernment@Delaware.gov. For State Police FOIA, send mail to the Delaware State Police, FOIA Coordinator, 1441 N. DuPont Highway, Dover, DE 19901. The DSP FOIA coordinator is Angie von Bank at angie.vonbank@delaware.gov.

Prosecution and the Criminal Division

The Delaware Department of Justice Criminal Division takes cases from arrest through trial. The division has offices in all three counties. A State Prosecutor sets policy for the group. County Prosecutors lead each office. New Castle County has the biggest setup. Its units include Homicide, Wilmington Trial, Felony Screening, Child Predator, and Violent Criminal Enterprise. Kent and Sussex counties run smaller units for felony trial, felony screening, and misdemeanor trial work.

See the DOJ Criminal Division page at attorneygeneral.delaware.gov/criminal.

Delaware DOJ Criminal Division for 24 Hour Booking prosecution

Statewide units cover Appeals, Community Engagement, Domestic Violence, Special Victims, and Traffic Safety. A Victim Witness Unit supports people through the court process.

Tip: If you are a victim in a Delaware case, sign up for VINE alerts so you get a notice when the defendant's custody status changes.

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Are 24 Hour Booking Records Public in Delaware

Most parts of a Delaware 24 Hour Booking record are open. Police blotters stay public by law. Court dockets are open. Arrest news releases go out from most agencies. Some files stay closed. Active investigations, sealed juvenile records, and items that would hurt a person's privacy are off limits. You can read more in the FOIA chapter at delcode.delaware.gov/title29/c100.

To get a full copy of a police report, you often have to be the victim or show a court subpoena. For records from the Delaware State Police, mail a crash report request to the Traffic Operations Section, P.O. Box 430, Dover, DE 19903. A standard crash report costs $25. A fatal crash report costs $60. Walk-in crash requests are not honored. The main DSP crash line is (302) 739-5931.

Delaware 24 Hour Booking data is mostly open. Police reports have tighter rules and may need a subpoena for non-victim access.

Browse Delaware 24 Hour Booking by County

Delaware has three counties. Each one has a Superior Court, State Police troops, and local police agencies. Pick a county below for local contact info and records links.

View All Delaware Counties

24 Hour Booking in Major Delaware Cities

Larger Delaware cities run their own police departments with their own records units. Pick a city below to find local agency info and booking resources.

View Major Delaware Cities