Find 72 Hour Booking in Knik-Fairview

Knik-Fairview 72 hour booking data comes from the Alaska State Troopers, the Mat-Su Pretrial Facility, and the Palmer Courthouse. Knik-Fairview is a census-designated place in the Matanuska-Susitna Borough, so it has no local police force of its own. Troopers and nearby Wasilla Police answer most calls. This page lays out each tool you can use to find a recent jail booking, pull a court file, or check live custody status. Start with the state court portal, then narrow down to the agency that made the arrest.

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Knik-Fairview 72 Hour Booking Overview

CDPCommunity Type
ASTPrimary Agency
Mat-SuPretrial Facility
PalmerTrial Court

How Knik-Fairview Bookings Work

Knik-Fairview is a small community west of Wasilla. It does not have a city charter, so there is no Knik-Fairview Police Department. Public safety falls to the Alaska State Troopers out of the Palmer Post. The troopers run a dispatch line at (907) 352-5401. They handle most calls in the CDP and the open land nearby.

When troopers make an arrest, they drive the suspect to the Mat-Su Pretrial Facility for booking. That is the state lockup closest to Knik-Fairview. It handles the first 72 hours of custody for most people in the Mat-Su Valley. The jail is run by the Alaska Department of Corrections.

The borough itself posts some news and links at matsu.gov. It is a good place to check borough meetings and alerts. Source page for the borough site that serves the community:

Knik-Fairview 72 hour booking Mat-Su Borough site

Use the borough site for trustee news, borough code, and public notice links. It does not host a jail roster, but it does link to the state sources you need.

The state court system keeps the widest record. Type a name in CourtView Public Access. The result shows every open and closed case a person has in Alaska. Knik-Fairview cases move to the Palmer Trial Court, so they list under Palmer in the results.

The Alaska Court System case search page also works. Both tools are free. Both pull from the same data source.

For live custody, go to VINE Link. VINE tracks the Mat-Su Pretrial Facility and every other state jail. Sign up for alerts so you know when a person moves or is released.

Note: Cases from Knik-Fairview usually file under Palmer in CourtView, since there is no Knik-Fairview court location.

Alaska State Troopers Palmer Post

The Palmer Post of the Alaska State Troopers covers a large chunk of the Mat-Su Valley. Dispatch is open 24 hours a day. Call (907) 352-5401 for any trooper matter tied to Knik-Fairview. The troopers post daily dispatch notes for the area on the main Alaska State Troopers site.

The Wasilla Police Department can help as the nearest city force. Wasilla officers may assist with calls inside the CDP when troopers are busy.

Primary AgencyAlaska State Troopers - Palmer Post
Dispatch(907) 352-5401
Assist AgencyWasilla Police Department
JailMat-Su Pretrial Facility
CourtPalmer Trial Court
Boroughmatsu.gov

Mat-Su Pretrial Facility and Inmate Lookup

The Mat-Su Pretrial Facility holds people who have just been booked in the valley. That makes it the main place to look for a Knik-Fairview 72 hour booking. The state runs the facility as part of its pretrial network. Check the Alaska DOC Facility Directory for the address and phone.

For an inmate name search, use the Alaska DOC offender search. Type a first and last name. The tool returns every person held in a state jail at that moment. Results show the current facility, the booking date, and the charge type.

VINE is the second layer. It covers notifications. If you care about someone's custody status, sign up for a free alert at vinelink.com.

Court Records for Knik-Fairview Cases

Most Knik-Fairview cases head to the Palmer Courthouse. The state court lists the case file online once a prosecutor files a charge. CourtView shows the first hearing, the bail decision, and the next date.

Alaska law sets the ground rules. AS 12.25.030 tells an officer when they can arrest a person without a warrant. AS 12.62.110 sets up the central repository that holds the state's criminal history.

Some case data is sealed. Juvenile files are closed. Adult files are open unless a judge says no.

Public Records Requests

The Alaska Public Records Act lets you ask for most police and court records. For state troopers, use the DPS FOIA Portal. Upload your request and track it online.

For a full personal rap sheet, go to the DPS Online Criminal History Portal. You can also read more about the rules at the DPS Background Check home page. Limits on release are in AS 12.62.160.

Victims can get updates from the Alaska Office of Victims' Rights. Historic records sit at the Alaska State Archives.

Note: State police reports for Knik-Fairview are filed with the Alaska DPS, not the borough, so send any records request to the state portal.

What a Knik-Fairview Booking Record Contains

A typical sheet lists the name, age, and address of the person held. It shows the time and place of the arrest. It names the charge and the officer. It gives a case number and a booking number. It lists bail and any release terms. All of that can show up in the state search portals within hours of the arrest.

  • Full name and date of birth
  • Arrest date, time, and location
  • Charge list and statute cited
  • Arresting trooper or officer
  • Booking and case number
  • Bail amount

Knik-Fairview in the Mat-Su Borough

Knik-Fairview is part of the Matanuska-Susitna Borough. It sits between Wasilla and the Knik Arm. The borough is one of the fastest growing regions in the state. Since the CDP shares police and jail systems with the rest of the valley, you can pair a Knik-Fairview search with Wasilla or Palmer records for a fuller picture.

Knik-Fairview 72 Hour Booking Timeline

The 72 hour booking clock in Knik-Fairview starts at the moment of arrest. Under AS 12.25.030, a peace officer can make a warrantless arrest for a felony, for any misdemeanor committed in the officer's presence, or for a domestic violence offense within 12 hours of the act. The person must appear before a judge within 48 to 72 hours, not counting weekends and holidays.

A lot happens during that short window. The arrested person is booked at Mat-Su Pretrial Facility in Palmer or by Wasilla Police Department. The initial appearance gets scheduled at the Palmer Courthouse. Bail or bond conditions are reviewed. A public defender may be assigned. Formal charges can be filed or dropped. The sequence creates the Knik-Fairview booking file.

The record subject has the right to see their own complete criminal history under AS 12.62.160. Third parties need a signed consent form or rely on the public reporting portion. The Alaska State Archives keeps older criminal justice files for research.

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