Duluth Criminal History Lookup

Criminal history records in Duluth are kept by the Duluth Police Department and the Gwinnett County court system. Duluth is a city in Gwinnett County, northeast of Atlanta, and has grown a lot over the past two decades. The police department handles arrests and incident reports for crimes inside city limits. Felony and serious misdemeanor cases from Duluth move to the Gwinnett County Superior Court Clerk. The GBI maintains state-level criminal history that includes arrests and convictions from the Duluth area. Between the city police, the county courts, and the state databases, there are several places to check for criminal history from this city.

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Duluth Criminal History Quick Facts

30,621 Population
Gwinnett County
Gwinnett Circuit Judicial Circuit
$15 State Felon Search Fee

Duluth Police Department Records

The Duluth Police Department is at 3167 Main St, Duluth, GA 30096. The phone number is (770) 476-4151. This department covers law enforcement within the Duluth city limits. When someone is arrested in Duluth, the officers create a report with the charges, date, and suspect information. This report is the first piece of criminal history data from a Duluth case.

Arrest records from the Duluth Police Department get reported to the Georgia Crime Information Center at the GBI. A Duluth arrest shows up in the statewide GCIC database. If you need a copy of a police report, file an open records request with the city. Georgia law gives the public the right to ask for these records. The agency has three business days to respond.

You can submit requests in person at the Main Street office or in writing by mail. Include names, dates, and any case numbers you have. Fees for search time and copying may apply. Records tied to active investigations can be withheld until the case is done. Simple requests tend to come back within a few days.

Georgia Department of Corrections database portal for Duluth criminal history lookups

Duluth PD records cover only incidents within the city. Gwinnett County is large, and the county police handle unincorporated areas. Nearby cities like Lawrenceville, Suwanee, and Sugar Hill have their own police departments. If you are searching for a record and are not sure which agency was involved, you may need to check a few places.

Gwinnett County Court Records for Duluth

Duluth is in Gwinnett County. Criminal court cases from Duluth go through the Gwinnett County court system. The Superior Court Clerk's office is at the Gwinnett Justice and Administration Center in Lawrenceville. This office keeps criminal case files for felonies and serious misdemeanors, including charges, plea information, trial outcomes, and sentencing data.

The Gwinnett County criminal history page goes into more detail on the clerk's office, the sheriff, and other resources. You can go to the courthouse in Lawrenceville to search records. The clerk charges for copies. Certified copies cost more. Bring the person's name and any details you have to help narrow the search.

Gwinnett County is in the Gwinnett Judicial Circuit. It is one of the busiest court systems in Georgia because of the county's large population. Besides Superior Court, the county runs a State Court for misdemeanor cases and a Magistrate Court for warrants and preliminary hearings. A misdemeanor arrest in Duluth might go to Gwinnett State Court rather than Superior Court. Check the right court based on the charge level.

The Gwinnett County Sheriff's Office keeps jail and booking records. If someone was booked into the county jail after a Duluth arrest, the sheriff has that data. They can also tell you if a person is currently in custody at the Gwinnett County Detention Center.

State Criminal History Tools

The Georgia Felon Search is the main state tool. It costs $15 per search and checks the GCIC database for felony convictions from across Georgia. That includes Gwinnett County cases. You enter a first name, last name, date of birth, and sex. Results show up right away. The fee applies whether or not a record is found.

The Georgia Department of Corrections offender search is free to use. It shows people currently in a GDC state prison. Someone convicted in Gwinnett County from a Duluth case who is serving state prison time will show up here. It does not cover people in the Gwinnett County Jail or those who have completed their sentence.

The GBI FAQ page covers the process in detail. It explains how to get your own record, how third-party searches work, and how to correct errors. The GBI runs a fingerprint-based criminal history check that gives the most thorough result.

Record Restriction for Duluth Cases

Georgia uses the term record restriction. Not expungement. A restricted record is sealed from public view. Law enforcement still has access. But the record will not come up in a regular public search.

Charges that were dropped or dismissed in Duluth may qualify for restriction. People who completed a pretrial diversion program can apply. The First Offender Act under O.C.G.A. Section 42-8-60 allows first-time offenders to serve their sentence without a formal conviction on their record. Once the sentence is done and the court discharges them, the record gets restricted.

All the details are in O.C.G.A. Section 35-3-37. For arrests on or after July 1, 2013, start with the prosecuting attorney. For older arrests, go through the arresting agency. Charges that were never sent to a prosecutor get restricted on their own. Two years for misdemeanors. Four for most felonies. Seven for serious violent felonies.

There is a retroactive First Offender option too. People who should have gotten First Offender treatment at sentencing can petition the court later. If granted, the conviction is removed from the public criminal history record.

What Duluth Criminal Records Show

A criminal history record tied to Duluth pulls from local and state sources. It lists the person's name, date of birth, and physical description. Arrest entries show which agency made the arrest, the date, and the charges filed. Court records from Gwinnett County add the outcome of each charge. That might be a conviction, plea deal, dismissal, or acquittal.

Some records are not public. Restricted records do not show in standard searches. Juvenile records are sealed in most cases under Georgia law. Federal crimes processed in federal court are in a separate system. If you want a full picture of someone's criminal history, you may need to look at both state and federal records.

Getting Your Own Record in Duluth

Any person in Georgia can see their own criminal history under O.C.G.A. Section 35-3-37. Go to the Duluth Police Department or the Gwinnett County Sheriff's Office. Get fingerprinted and pay a fee up to $15. The prints go to the GCIC. They mail back a copy of your record.

If there are mistakes on the record, you can challenge them. Send a written request to the GCIC at P.O. Box 370808, Decatur, Georgia 30037-0808. They have 60 days to investigate. You can also call (404) 244-2639. If you want to go in person to the GCIC office, make an appointment first.

Duluth Municipal Court

The Duluth Municipal Court handles city ordinance violations, traffic offenses, and some misdemeanor charges within city limits. It does not hear felonies. Those go to Gwinnett County Superior Court. For a minor criminal matter or a traffic case from Duluth, the municipal court is where to check.

Contact the municipal court clerk for records. Not everything is online, so you may need to visit in person or call ahead. Ask about fees and what information to bring. The court is at Duluth City Hall on Main Street. Turnaround times for record copies depend on the volume of requests the clerk is handling.

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