Superior People Search Guide
Superior People Search is often fastest when you begin with the shared municipal address on N. 14th Street, because both the police department and the city clerk sit there even though they handle different files. That makes the city layout simple once you know what you are looking for, but it also means the first step has to match the record type. If the trail begins with a police contact, a city filing, or a court case, the correct office will usually become clear quickly. If it moves beyond city government, Wisconsin court and state resources can carry the search forward without forcing you to start over.
Superior People Search Basics
The city website at ci.superior.wi.us is the best place to orient a Superior search because it shows the municipal structure before you start chasing a name through different record systems. That matters when the same address houses more than one office, because the address alone does not tell you which desk has the file. Superior People Search gets easier once you decide whether the person you are looking for belongs in police records, a clerk file, a court docket, or a state directory.
When a search begins with only a name, it helps to ask what kind of event or document created the record in the first place. A police contact points to the department, a council or license reference points to the clerk, and a docket reference points to the court system. Superior has enough local activity that the same person can appear in more than one source, so it pays to compare the record type before you compare the name. That keeps the search focused and stops you from treating every result like it came from the same office.
The city homepage at ci.superior.wi.us also helps when you want to confirm department names before you call or send a request. That is especially useful in Superior because the police department and clerk are both on the same street and can easily be confused if you are moving quickly. A simple directory check can save time and point you to the right municipal contact before you begin a longer search.
The local image below matches that city-first approach and shows why the shared municipal address is a useful starting point rather than a reason to guess.

That view fits a search that starts with Superior's city offices and then moves outward only when the municipal records are not enough.
Superior People Search Police Records
The Superior Police Department is at 1316 N. 14th Street, Superior, WI 54880, and the phone number is (715) 395-7234. The non-emergency number is the same, which makes it easy to reach the department when you need to ask about an incident report, crash record, or other police-related file. Because the department shares an address with the city clerk, it helps to know the record type before you call. If the person you are looking for is tied to a call for service or a specific event, the police desk is the correct place to begin.
In a Superior People Search, the most efficient police request is usually the one that stays small and specific. One event, one date range, and one person or address is usually enough to get the department pointed in the right direction. If you know the name, approximate time, or report reference, that detail helps the department confirm whether the file exists and whether it can be released. That kind of focused request is much better than asking for everything connected to a person, because it gives the office a manageable place to start.
If you are unsure whether the information belongs with police or with the clerk, the police line at (715) 395-7234 can help you confirm the right branch of city government. That quick check is often the difference between a short local search and a longer trail that wanders through the wrong office. It is a practical first move when all you have is a name and a rough idea of what happened.
Superior People Search City Clerk Records
The Superior City Clerk is also at 1316 N. 14th Street, Superior, WI 54880, and the phone number is (715) 395-7208. That office is the place to check for local records that are not police files, including meeting records, ordinances, licenses, notices, and other city-held documents. Because the clerk shares the same building and street address as the police department, it is easy to confuse the two, but the file types are different. The clerk is the better stop when the record comes from city business rather than from a police event.
Superior People Search often becomes clearer when you compare the clerk file against the police file instead of assuming that one office will answer everything. A person may appear in a city agenda, a permit, or a public hearing record without ever appearing in a police report. That difference matters when you are trying to identify the right person or confirm whether the same name belongs to the same record. The clerk's office can help you anchor the city side of the search before you move into court or state resources.
If you need the municipal entry point first, the city site at ci.superior.wi.us is the right place to confirm where the clerk fits into the broader city structure. Once you know the file is a clerk matter, the phone number and address make the next step straightforward. That keeps you from bouncing between departments that share a building but not a record set.
Superior People Search Court and State Records
When a Superior search moves beyond city records, the Wisconsin Circuit Court Access system at wcca.wicourts.gov is the next logical tool. It lets you search public circuit court information by name or case number, which is useful when the person you are looking for appears in a county court file instead of a city file. If you already have a docket reference or filing date, the result is usually easier to narrow. If not, the name search still helps you see whether the person shows up in a public court record at all.
The broader court site at wicourts.gov is useful when you need forms, court structure, or a better understanding of the kind of case you found. Superior People Search can easily reach this stage if the city office only has part of the story or if the record belongs to a legal process that starts outside city government. The court site gives you the framework to decide whether you are looking at a civil case, a criminal matter, or another filing that should be handled through the state court system.
For custody or supervision checks, the Department of Corrections locator at appsdoc.wi.gov/lop is another useful state resource. If your search is about family history or a certified record, the vital records page at dhs.wisconsin.gov/vitalrecords/index.htm is the better route. The Wisconsin Law Library at wilawlibrary.gov can help when you want to understand which record source should answer the question before you make a request.
Superior People Search Next Steps
The strongest next step after a Superior search is usually to compare the city result with the state court result and see whether the same person shows up in both places. If the name appears only once, that may mean you have the wrong office or the wrong spelling. If it appears in more than one source, the trail becomes easier to follow because the records are pointing in the same direction. That is why Superior People Search works better as a series of targeted checks than as one broad search across every available website.
If you need to keep going, use the city site, the clerk office, the police department, WCCA, and the state directories in that order until the record path is clear. The city homepage at ci.superior.wi.us helps you confirm the office names, while the state sites tell you whether the person appears outside city government. That sequence usually gets you to the right record with the fewest detours.
Because the police department and clerk are both on N. 14th Street, it is especially worth pausing long enough to match the record type to the office before you call. A quick check up front can save a longer round of follow-up later. The search box below gives you one more route if you want to test a second angle on the same name.