Cudahy People Search
Cudahy People Search works best when you keep the city offices and Milwaukee County systems separate from the start. The police department and city clerk share the same address, which makes the local part of the search easy to reach, but the record itself may still live in a county system once the trail moves into custody, court, or property records. If you know only a name, a street, or a rough date, you can still begin with the city desk and let the office structure tell you where the file belongs. That keeps the search focused and avoids guessing.
Cudahy People Search Basics
The Cudahy Police Department at 5050 S. Lake Drive, Cudahy, WI 53110, is the first city office most people need when the search begins with an incident, a call for service, or another local police question. The main phone number is (414) 769-2260, and the same number is used for non-emergency contact. That gives you one clear place to start when you need to confirm whether the city has a record, a report, or a lead tied to a local address.
The Cudahy City Clerk is also at 5050 S. Lake Drive, Cudahy, WI 53110, and the clerk office can help when the question is about city records, routing, or another municipal file that is not strictly a police matter. The clerk phone number is (414) 769-2212. In a Cudahy People Search, the clerk office can be the bridge between a city clue and a county record path because it helps decide where the record really belongs before you move on.
The Milwaukee County Sheriff's Office page at county.milwaukee.gov/EN/Sheriff is the county anchor when a Cudahy search leaves the city desk. If the same person also appears in custody or another county-held file, that office is the cleanest place to keep the search moving. It is a useful county reference when the city office has already done its part and the record trail needs a broader Milwaukee County view.
That county view is a good starting point when the city record trail is only one piece of a larger Milwaukee County file.
Cudahy People Search and Police Records
When a Cudahy search begins with police, the most helpful detail is usually the event that created the record. A date, an address, or a short incident note gives the department a much better chance of finding the right file than a broad name-only request. Police records can also point to county systems once the local office has identified the matter, which means the city desk may be the first stop rather than the only stop. That is especially true when a local report becomes part of a later custody or court question.
The Milwaukee Police Department page at city.milwaukee.gov/police is a useful metro reference when you want another official public safety landing page in the Milwaukee area. It does not replace the Cudahy police desk, but it gives you a nearby public resource to compare when a name or incident clue shows up in more than one city system. For a People Search, that extra reference can keep the trail from feeling scattered.
The image below reflects the police side of the search and keeps the record question tied to an official records office. It is useful when the local report needs to be followed into county records rather than treated as a final result.
That police image is a reminder that a city report often becomes the first clue in a larger Milwaukee County record search.
Cudahy People Search for Court and County Records
Cudahy does not need a separate city court explanation before you know the next stop, because the county system already gives you the broader court path. The Milwaukee County Clerk of Courts at county.milwaukee.gov/EN/Clerk-of-Courts is the right place to move a search once the city record becomes a court file. That page matters when a citation, a hearing note, or a case number no longer fits the city desk and needs a county court custodian instead.
The Milwaukee Municipal Court page at city.milwaukee.gov/municourt is a useful public court reference if your Cudahy search is comparing metro-area municipal records. It gives you an official city court landing page for the broader Milwaukee area, which can help when you are sorting whether a matter belongs in a city case file or a county case file. If the file has already moved away from the local police desk, this page keeps the public court route visible.
The image below helps separate the court route from the police route. That distinction matters because a name can appear at the city level without telling you which court actually owns the file.
That clerk view is the clearest sign that the search has moved from local police or clerk routing into a county case file.
Cudahy People Search for Jail and Deeds
The county inmate search at inmatesearch.mkesheriff.org is the quickest public check when you need current custody information. It helps you confirm whether a person is currently in the jail system, whether a booking has changed, or whether the search should stay on the records side instead of the custody side. In a Cudahy People Search, that quick check can tell you whether the county sheriff route is the right next step.
The image below gives you the custody side of the Milwaukee County system that often sits behind a city police or court question. It is the best visual checkpoint when you need to know whether the record is active now or belongs in a historical file.
The Register of Deeds page at county.milwaukee.gov/EN/Register-of-Deeds is the place to go when the search is tied to a parcel, a deed, or another recorded property document. A person can show up in a property record even if there is no police or court hit, so this page is useful when the clue is an address instead of an arrest or citation. It gives the search a place-based path that can be just as important as the case-based one.
The image below shows the property-record side of the same county system. It is a good final stop when a Cudahy People Search needs to connect a name to a Milwaukee County property file.
That register view can confirm whether the same person also appears in a recorded property trail.
Putting Cudahy People Search Together
The most reliable way to use Cudahy People Search is to let the record type decide the office. Police handles local incident questions, the city clerk handles municipal routing, the county clerk of courts handles court files, the inmate search checks custody, and the register of deeds handles recorded property documents. If you start with the wrong office, the search can still recover, but it is faster when the first stop already matches the file.
Cudahy works especially well this way because the city and Milwaukee County each hold a different piece of the record trail. A name plus an address or a date is usually enough to point you in the right direction, and the county pages can finish the search when the local office only gives you part of the answer. Once the record is matched to the right custodian, the rest of the search becomes much clearer.