Tomah People Search Overview
Tomah People Search works best when you keep the city desk and the state tools in separate lanes. In Tomah, the police department at 205 N. Superior Avenue and the city clerk at 819 Superior Avenue handle different parts of the local trail, so the right office depends on the record you want. A report, a municipal clue, a court reference, or a voter detail can each point somewhere else. This page keeps the local contacts and Wisconsin reference tools in one place so the search starts with the right office instead of a broad guess.
Tomah People Search Basics
Start with the city home page at tomahwi.gov when you want the broader municipal frame. The site gives you access to city departments, office contacts, and the clerk and police pages that matter most in a Tomah People Search. If the clue is still broad, pause before you request anything and decide whether the record feels like a police file, a clerk file, or a court record.
The city clerk office is one of the most useful local stops because it handles records, elections, and other municipal work that can place a person in the city paper trail without involving law enforcement. That matters when the search clue is a name, an address, or a city action and not a public safety event. The clerk page also gives you a good picture of how the city organizes public information.
Tomah People Search gets easier when the clue is matched to the office before the call. If the record came from city government, start with the clerk. If it came from an incident or complaint, start with police. If it came from a docket or case reference, move to the state tools below and keep the trail tied to the record type.
Tomah Police and Clerk Records
Tomah Police at 205 N. Superior Avenue is the first stop for incident reports, complaint follow-up, and questions about whether a police file exists. The main and non-emergency phone is (608) 374-7400, which keeps the contact path simple when you already know the report context. The city police page at tomahwi.gov/police is the main municipal reference for that office.
The city clerk at 819 Superior Avenue uses (608) 374-7401, and that office is the better fit for records that are not police files. City clerk work can include elections, city records, local filings, and other municipal items that help identify a person without crossing into the law-enforcement side of the file. The clerk office page at tomahwi.gov/clerk is a useful place to see the broader office role.
If the clue is only a name, add a street, year, or event type before you call. That makes the request easier to answer. Tomah People Search tends to go faster when the office hears a record type first and a broad story second.
Tomah People Search and Wisconsin Courts
When a Tomah clue becomes a court question, WCCA at wcca.wicourts.gov is the quickest public check. It lets you look for case names, case numbers, and docket details before you ask for a file copy. The broader Wisconsin Court System at wicourts.gov shows how the circuit court and other state court pages fit together.
The Wisconsin Circuit Court Access portal at wcca.wicourts.gov is the best visual checkpoint when a Tomah clue moves from a city question to a case file.

That screen is useful because it tells you whether the name belongs in public circuit court records before you spend time on a records request. If the case appears there, the next step is much more focused.
The Wisconsin State Law Library at wilawlibrary.gov is a smart companion when you need to understand a filing path, a docket label, or a court form. It can help you read the record before you ask for a copy of it.
Tomah People Search, Vital Records, and MyVote
Some Tomah People Search clues make more sense after you check voter and vital records. That is especially true when a person has moved, changed a name, or appears under a slightly different address in another file. The state tools can help you confirm the person first so you do not spend time on the wrong local record.
The MyVote Wisconsin site at myvote.wi.gov is the public check for registration and polling-place details. The state vital records page at dhs.wisconsin.gov/vitalrecords/index.htm is the place to use when a birth, death, or name-history issue affects how you read the city record trail.
The MyVote Wisconsin page at myvote.wi.gov is a useful visual check when a Tomah People Search needs a current address or registration clue.

That image fits the voter side of the search because address and registration details often tell you whether the city clue belongs to the right person. It can also help sort out a move or a name change before you make a request.
When the identity details line up, the clerk or police office usually has a much easier time finding the right file.
Tomah People Search and Corrections Checks
If the trail turns into custody or supervision, the Wisconsin DOC offender locator at appsdoc.wi.gov/lop is the state check to use. It can tell you whether a person is in the corrections system or under supervision, which is a different question from whether Tomah police created a local report. That difference matters when the search has moved beyond the city layer.
The Wisconsin Department of Corrections home page at doc.wi.gov gives you the broader corrections reference if you need it. That page is useful when a Tomah People Search ends with a custody question and you need the official state path rather than a guess.
Keep in mind that a corrections result is not a city file. If DOC does not show the person, the answer may still be with the police desk, the clerk office, or a circuit court record. Each one answers a different question.
Next Steps for Tomah People Search
The most efficient route is local first, state second. Start with Tomah police for incident records, use the city clerk for municipal records, then move to WCCA when the clue becomes a court issue. If the trail is about address, voting, or identity, MyVote and vital records can fill in the missing context before you make the request.
For a final check, the city home page at tomahwi.gov, the court system at wicourts.gov, and the law library at wilawlibrary.gov give you the official Wisconsin framework. Tomah People Search is easier when the office, the record type, and the date all point in the same direction.
Once that happens, you are usually asking the right desk the right question.