Green Bay People Search
Green Bay People Search usually works best when you split the search between the city and Brown County instead of treating everything as one record pool. Police requests, municipal court information, city clerk records, court files, deed records, and open data each sit in a different place. If you know the kind of record you want, the right office becomes clear fast. If you do not, the city and county routes below give you a way to narrow the trail without wasting time on the wrong desk or the wrong kind of file.
Green Bay People Search Basics
The Green Bay police records request page at greenbaywi.gov/1084/Records-Requests is the main starting point when the record is tied to a police matter. The Records Department can be reached at (920) 448-3329, requests can be made in person, by phone, by email, or by mail, and the department asks for a completed DPPA permissible uses form with each open record request. That setup makes Green Bay different from a one-form-fits-all city page because the request method can change depending on what you need.
If you are looking for a police record, it helps to know whether the request is about a crash, a report, a photo, or a file with personal identifying information. The city page at greenbaywi.gov gives the broader municipal context, while the records request page tells you how to start. Green Bay People Search is easier when you begin with the office that already has the record instead of asking a general city desk to sort it out for you.
The records request page also explains that the Police Department will email records at no charge if you want electronic delivery, while paper copies and multimedia files follow different handling rules. That detail is useful because it shows how the city separates a simple record request from a more detailed file request.

That city image fits the first step in a Green Bay search, where the municipal side often determines whether you stay at city level or move to county records.
Green Bay Police Records and Request Methods
The Green Bay Police Department is at 307 S. Adams Street, Green Bay, WI 54301, with the main phone number (920) 448-3200. The records department phone is (920) 448-3329, and the records request email is recordrequest@greenbaywi.gov. If you prefer mail, the records request page lists the department address for written requests. That gives you several ways to start a search, which is helpful when you already know the name or date but not the exact file number.
The DPPA form requirement matters because some police records contain personal information that is not handled the same way as a basic incident summary. If you are requesting a report on behalf of a business, a professional office, or another specific authorized use, make sure the request includes the proper form. Green Bay People Search gets smoother when the record request is complete the first time, since incomplete requests can sit while the department waits for missing details.
The records request page at greenbaywi.gov/1084/Records-Requests is the quickest way to move from a general police question to a file request. The department page shows the office that controls the record, and the request page shows the path for getting it. That pairing is the simplest way to keep a Green Bay search from drifting into unrelated city business.

That open data image belongs here because the city also offers public data tools that can confirm whether a record is already published before you file a request.
Green Bay People Search Municipal Court Records
The Green Bay Municipal Court page at greenbaywi.gov/497/Municipal-Court handles city court information and municipal case access. The court phone number is (920) 448-3000, and the city notes that municipal court records run from January 1, 2004 forward and are updated each Thursday. That time window is important because it tells you immediately whether a case should be there or whether you need to move the search to another office.
If your People Search is about a citation, ordinance issue, or other municipal matter, the court page is the natural place to begin. It separates city cases from county court files and keeps you from assuming the municipal docket is the same thing as a Brown County circuit case. The court page is especially helpful when you want to confirm whether the city already has the record online or whether a direct request is still needed.
The municipal court page at greenbaywi.gov/497/Municipal-Court is the best place to confirm the date range and the Thursday update cycle. Green Bay court records also connect well with the city and county office structure because a person can show up in one system without appearing in the others. The date range, Thursday update schedule, and court contact page help you decide whether the next stop is a city desk, a county clerk, or a property record search.

That municipal court image is the right visual for the city-level case route that sits behind citations and municipal hearings.
Green Bay County and City Clerk Routes
The Green Bay City Clerk page at greenbaywi.gov/clerk is where city records, election materials, licenses, and other municipal files start. The office is at 100 N. Jefferson Street, Green Bay, WI 54301, and the clerk page gives the city contact details if you need to confirm where a local record request should go. For city matters that are not police reports or court cases, that office is the right place to begin.
Brown County records matter just as much in a Green Bay search. The Clerk of Circuit Court at browncountywi.gov/departments/clerk-of-circuit-court/ is the county court file office, the sheriff page at browncountywi.gov/departments/sheriff-s-office/ is the law enforcement and jail route, and the register of deeds at browncountywi.gov/departments/register-of-deeds/ handles deed and property records. If your search starts with a name and then turns into a court or property question, those county pages are the logical next stop.
The Brown County Clerk of Circuit Court page at browncountywi.gov/departments/clerk-of-circuit-court/ is the county-side step when a city file is not enough. That split between city and county is what keeps Green Bay People Search efficient. The city clerk handles city records, the municipal court handles city citations, and Brown County handles the broader court and property files. Once you know which lane applies, the search gets much easier to follow.

That image also works as a reminder that Green Bay records often require both city and county checks before the trail is complete.
Green Bay People Search Next Steps
If the city and county record paths do not answer the question right away, the open data portal at greenbaywi.gov/169/Open-Data is a good final checkpoint. It can show whether some municipal information is already published before you ask for a direct record copy. That is especially helpful when you are trying to decide if you need a court file, a police report, or only a public data reference.
Green Bay People Search works best when you treat the city records, the municipal court, and the Brown County offices as separate but connected sources. If you are looking for police material, use the records department. If you are looking for a city citation, use the municipal court. If you are looking for a court file, deed, or custody record, move to Brown County. Once that pattern is clear, the search becomes much faster and the office you contact is more likely to be the one that can actually help.
The open data portal at greenbaywi.gov/169/Open-Data is another useful checkpoint if you want to compare a city dataset against a direct records request. The search box below gives you one more way to keep going if you want to try a different route or compare a second record path.

That open data image closes the loop by showing the city resource that can confirm whether a record is already public before you file a request.