Salem Lakes People Search Guide
Salem Lakes People Search works best when you keep the village and county paths separate from the start. The village clerk is the local contact for records and routing, and the municipal court handles local ordinance matters. Once the trail moves into Kenosha County, the county clerk of courts, sheriff, and property records pages take over. This page keeps those routes together so a name, address, or citation clue can move to the right office without guesswork.
Salem Lakes People Search and Village Offices
The village starting point is the Village Clerk and the Municipal Court. In the research for this page, both are tied to 9700 Camp Lake Road in Salem Lakes with the main phone number (262) 889-8621. That makes the village side easy to understand once you know whether the clue is a record request, a municipal citation, or another local file that belongs in the village system rather than in a county office.
The clerk page explains that the office records, keeps, indexes, and preserves the village archives, ordinances, minutes, and other municipal materials. That is a useful distinction because Salem Lakes People Search often starts with a village clue that looks broader than it really is. The municipal court page is the other half of that local path because it handles ordinance matters and local court follow-up, while criminal matters move on to the county circuit court.
The image below gives the wider county setting that usually comes next. It belongs here because Salem Lakes People Search often begins in the village but quickly reaches Kenosha County records.
Kenosha County is the broader public map when the village record needs a county follow-up.

That county overview helps because the same person can appear in both village and county records for different reasons.
Salem Lakes People Search for Police and Ordinance Records
Salem Lakes does not use a separate city police model in the way some Wisconsin cities do, so the county relationship matters more here. The village ordinances page at Village Ordinances & Resolutions explains that the village is contracted with the Kenosha County Sheriff’s Department for traffic enforcement and ordinance violations. That means a police-style Salem Lakes People Search often needs to move through a county sheriff path rather than a village police desk.
The municipal court page is the other part of that story because it handles local ordinance matters, traffic, parking, and other village-level violations. If the record is a complaint or a village ordinance question, the court and clerk pages are usually the best place to begin. If the matter is an enforcement contact or a county-level incident, the sheriff side becomes more important. The key is to decide whether you are looking for a local ordinance record or a broader county law-enforcement file.
The next image reflects the public court layer that often follows a village enforcement clue. It fits here because Salem Lakes People Search frequently shifts from a village ordinance record to a county court file.
Wisconsin Circuit Court Access is the public statewide case search when a Salem Lakes matter reaches circuit court.

That statewide court view is useful when you need to see whether a village matter has become a county case.
Salem Lakes People Search and County Court Files
When a case leaves the village side, the Kenosha County Clerk of Courts is the office that manages the circuit court record. The Record Search page and the Court Case Tracker are both useful because they help you see whether a name is already tied to a county docket. That is especially helpful when the village clue is only a citation, a hearing, or a person name and you still need to confirm the exact case path.
Salem Lakes People Search becomes more manageable once you treat the village court and the county clerk as separate but connected steps. The village court handles municipal matters, while the county clerk of courts holds the wider circuit court file. If you already know the general matter type, it is easy to choose the right office. If you do not, the county record search can still help you narrow the field before you request copies or ask for a formal review.
The image below matches the county case-tracking step. It belongs here because a village record often becomes readable only after the county docket is visible.
Kenosha County Clerk of Courts and the case tracker are the core public follow-up tools once the search leaves the village.
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That county case tracker is a practical checkpoint when you are separating a current case from an older reference.
Salem Lakes People Search for Inmate and Property Records
Custody questions belong with the county sheriff, not the village clerk. The Inmate Search page gives a public status check when you want to know whether a person is currently in custody. That is the right follow-up if a Salem Lakes matter has turned into a jail question, because the custody record changes faster than a normal court file and the county tool is built for that kind of check.
Property questions are a different trail. The Register of Deeds office and the county land recording system help when the search turns toward a deed, mortgage, or recorded document tied to a person or address. Salem Lakes People Search often reaches this point when the village clue is about ownership, transfers, or a property trail that sits outside the municipal court file. The county record is the place where that type of history is normally preserved.
The image below matches the property and county-record layer. It fits here because a public record search often ends with a recorded document instead of a police report.
Kenosha County recording explains the county path for real estate documents and other recorded filings.

That record-search view is a good reminder that the final answer is often a document trail rather than a single office note.
Next Steps for Salem Lakes People Search
The cleanest workflow is to start with the village office that matches the clue, then move to Kenosha County only when the trail leaves village government. Use the village clerk for municipal records and routing. Use the municipal court for ordinance matters. Use the county clerk of courts for circuit court files. Use the sheriff and inmate search pages for custody questions. Use the register of deeds and recording pages for property documents.
If you still need a broader map, the village pages at Village Clerk, Municipal Court, and Village Ordinances & Resolutions keep the local side in view, while Kenosha County carries the county side. Salem Lakes People Search is strongest when the office matches the record type, because that keeps the search narrow and makes the next step obvious.