Search Marietta Criminal History

Criminal history records in Marietta are managed by the Marietta Police Department, the Cobb County court system, and state-level databases run by the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. Marietta is the county seat of Cobb County, which means the courthouse that handles felony cases for the entire county is right in the city. The Marietta PD keeps arrest reports and incident data for crimes inside city limits. Court records for criminal cases go through the Cobb County Superior Court Clerk. State tools like the Georgia Felon Search and the GDC offender lookup also cover Marietta cases. Getting a full picture often means checking more than one source.

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Marietta Criminal History Quick Facts

61,080 Population
Cobb County
Cobb Circuit Judicial Circuit
$15 State Felon Search Fee

Marietta Police Department Records

The Marietta Police Department is the primary law enforcement agency for the city. They are located at 240 Lemon Street, Marietta, GA 30060. You can reach them at (770) 794-5300. The department handles all arrests, incident reports, and local crime data for events within Marietta city limits. When someone is arrested by Marietta police, the arrest goes into the local record system and then gets reported to the state.

Arrest data from Marietta PD feeds into the Georgia Crime Information Center. State law requires all law enforcement agencies to report arrest information. So a Marietta arrest shows up in GCIC searches along with local police files. If you need a copy of a police report from a case in Marietta, you can contact the records division at the Lemon Street office. Walk-in requests are accepted during regular business hours. You can also call ahead to ask about what is available and what the process looks like.

Georgia Felon Search tool for criminal history records

Marietta PD records only cover crimes that happened inside the city. Cobb County is large and has several other cities with their own police forces, including Smyrna, Kennesaw, and Acworth. The Cobb County Police Department covers unincorporated parts of the county. If you are not sure which agency made the arrest, it helps to know the exact location of the incident. The wrong agency will not have the records you need.

Open records requests are how most people get copies of police documents. Under Georgia's Open Records Act, you can ask for incident reports, arrest reports, and other police records. The city can charge for the time it takes to search and for copies. Simple requests usually come back in a few days. Agencies must respond within three business days under the law, though the first response may just say they got the request.

Cobb County Court Records for Marietta

Marietta is the county seat of Cobb County. That means the Cobb County Courthouse is located right in the city. All felony criminal cases from Marietta, and from every other city in Cobb County, go through the Superior Court here. The clerk of courts keeps case files that include charges, plea information, trial results, and sentencing details. The Cobb County Superior Court Clerk is at 70 Haynes Street, Marietta, GA 30090. Phone is (770) 528-1300.

You can visit the clerk's office in person to look up case records. There is a fee for copies, and certified copies cost more than plain ones. Some Cobb County court records can be searched through the Georgia Superior Court Clerks' Cooperative Authority website. This statewide portal pulls data from many counties. It is a good starting point before making a trip to the courthouse.

The Cobb County Sheriff's Office keeps booking records for the county jail. Their office is at 1825 County Services Parkway, Marietta, GA 30060. The sheriff runs an online inmate search that shows who is currently held in the jail. It is free to use but only shows current inmates. It does not give full criminal history or past bookings. The Cobb County criminal history page has more detail on the full range of county resources.

State Criminal History Tools

The Georgia Felon Search is a state-run tool that checks the GCIC database for felony convictions. It costs $15 per search. You enter a first name, last name, date of birth, and sex. Results come back right away. The fee is charged even if no record turns up. This tool covers all of Georgia, including Marietta. It only shows felony convictions. Misdemeanors and restricted records will not appear.

The Georgia Department of Corrections offender search is free. It shows people currently in a state prison or on state supervision. If someone convicted in a Marietta case is serving time at a GDC facility, they will show up here. This tool does not cover people in the Cobb County Jail or those who have already finished their sentence.

The GBI FAQ page answers common questions about criminal history records in Georgia. It explains how to get your own record and how to search for someone else. The GBI also offers fingerprint-based criminal history checks. Those are the most thorough option because they catch records that name-based searches sometimes miss.

Record Restriction for Marietta Cases

Georgia does not use the word expungement. The state calls it record restriction. When a record is restricted, it gets sealed from public view. Law enforcement can still see it. But it will not show up in a standard public search.

Several situations can lead to record restriction. Charges that were dropped or dismissed may qualify. People who went through a pretrial diversion program and completed it can apply. The First Offender Act, found in O.C.G.A. Section 42-8-60, lets eligible first-time offenders finish their sentence without a formal conviction on their record. Once the sentence is done, the court discharges them and the record gets restricted.

The full rules for record restriction are in O.C.G.A. Section 35-3-37. For arrests after July 1, 2013, you start by contacting the prosecuting attorney in Cobb County. For older arrests, go through the arresting agency. In Marietta, that would be the Marietta Police Department or the Cobb County district attorney depending on the case.

There is also a retroactive First Offender option. If someone should have been sentenced under the First Offender Act but was not at the time, they can petition the court later. The Cobb County Superior Court handles those petitions. If granted, the conviction is removed from the public criminal history record.

What Marietta Criminal Records Include

A criminal history record tied to Marietta pulls data from local and state sources. It includes the person's name, date of birth, and physical description. Arrest records list the agency that made the arrest, the date, and what charges were filed. Court records from Cobb County show whether the case ended in a conviction, a dismissal, or a plea deal. If the person served time in state prison, that appears in the state system as well.

Not all records are open to the public. Restricted records will not show in public searches. Juvenile records are sealed in most cases. Federal crimes handled by federal courts are not in the state GCIC system. Those sit with federal agencies. Under Georgia law, the GCIC can share criminal history records with a defendant's attorney upon written request.

Getting Your Own Criminal History in Marietta

You can get a copy of your own Georgia criminal history record through the Marietta Police Department or any sheriff's office in the state. Under O.C.G.A. Section 35-3-37, any person can review their own record by filing a written request. You go in, get fingerprinted, and pay a fee. The fingerprints get sent to the GBI's Georgia Crime Information Center. They send back a copy of what they have on file. The fee is capped at $15, not counting the cost of fingerprints.

If your record has wrong or misleading data, you have the right to challenge it. The agency has 60 days to act on your request. You can reach the GCIC at P.O. Box 370808, Decatur, Georgia 30037-0808. Their phone number is (404) 244-2639. Same-day walk-in appointments are not available at the GCIC office, so plan ahead if you need to go in person.

Marietta Municipal Court

The Marietta Municipal Court handles cases for city ordinance violations, traffic offenses, and some misdemeanor charges. The court does not hear felony cases. Those go to Cobb County Superior Court. If you are looking for a record from a minor criminal case or a traffic offense in Marietta, the municipal court is the place to check.

Municipal court records can be requested through the court clerk. You may need to visit in person or call the court to ask about the process. Not all municipal court records are available online. If you need certified copies, expect to go to the courthouse. The municipal court sits in the Marietta city government complex on Roswell Street.

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Nearby Cities With Criminal Records

Marietta is near several other cities in Cobb County and the northwest metro area. Each has its own police force and local criminal records. Arrest data from all of these agencies flows into the state GCIC system.

Smyrna and Kennesaw are also in Cobb County and use the same county court system. Mableton is a nearby community in the same area. All felony cases from these cities go through the Cobb County Superior Court in Marietta.