Tanaina 72 Hour Booking

Tanaina is a small census-designated place tucked into the Matanuska-Susitna Borough, just outside of Wasilla. People who want to look up a Tanaina 72 hour booking record almost always start with the agencies that handle Mat-Su jail intake and the local trooper post. This page walks you through where Tanaina arrests get logged, which jail holds folks pending court, and how to use online tools to find recent bookings, custody status, and case files. Use the search box below to begin a public records lookup.

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Tanaina 72 Hour Booking Overview

Mat-SuBorough
ASTPrimary Police
Mat-Su PretrialHolding Jail
PalmerCourt Venue

Where Tanaina 72 Hour Bookings Happen

Tanaina sits inside the Matanuska-Susitna Borough, which does not run its own borough police force. That means most arrests in Tanaina are handled by the Alaska State Troopers out of the Palmer post. Once a person is taken into custody, they are usually moved to the Mat-Su Pretrial Facility for booking and short-term holding. The 72 hour booking record gets created during that intake step.

The jail logs the arrest time, charges, the arresting agency, and basic ID details. Court arraignment for new bookings out of Tanaina is set at the Palmer Courthouse, which is the trial court for the Mat-Su area. So if you want a full picture of a recent Tanaina arrest, you may need to check both the jail roster and the court docket.

Note: Bookings can be moved between facilities within the first day, so it helps to check more than one source.

The fastest way to search a recent Tanaina 72 hour booking is the state's online tools. The CourtView Public Access portal lets you pull up new criminal cases by name. Most fresh bookings show up in CourtView within a day or two of the first court appearance. You can search by last name, case number, or date range.

For real-time custody status, use the VINE Link service. VINE pulls data from the Alaska Department of Corrections and shows whether someone is currently held at the Mat-Su Pretrial Facility, has been released, or has been moved to another jail. You can sign up for free alerts on a person's status. This is a key tool for victims and family members.

The state's main case search page at courts.alaska.gov also lists tips for narrowing your search and notes which records are sealed under court rules.

The Alaska Court System runs the search portal that hosts these records. Here is a screenshot from records.courts.alaska.gov showing the public access landing page.

tanaina 72 hour booking courtview public access portal

This is the same CourtView gateway used by people across the Mat-Su area to find new criminal filings.

Police Agencies Serving Tanaina

Since Tanaina is unincorporated, the main law enforcement contact is the Palmer trooper post. You can reach Mat-Su dispatch at (907) 352-5401. Troopers handle calls, file the initial reports, and take suspects to the Mat-Su Pretrial Facility.

Nearby city police forces sometimes assist on calls that cross town lines. The Wasilla Police Department covers Wasilla city limits, and the Palmer Police Department works within Palmer. Both agencies can be involved in joint cases that touch Tanaina.

Primary AgencyAlaska State Troopers, Palmer Post
Dispatch Phone(907) 352-5401
Records Webdps.alaska.gov
Holding FacilityMat-Su Pretrial Facility

Mat-Su Pretrial and 72 Hour Holds

Under Alaska Statute AS 12.25.030, troopers can make arrests without a warrant in many situations. After that, the person must be brought before a judge without unnecessary delay. The Mat-Su Pretrial Facility is the booking jail that handles this step for Tanaina arrests. The facility's roster is part of the broader Alaska DOC institutions list.

Once booked, the inmate's data flows into the Department of Corrections system. From there it feeds VINE and the court system. So a single 72 hour booking can show up in three places: jail roster, court docket, and victim notification feed.

Court Records for Tanaina Cases

The Palmer Courthouse is the trial court that handles Tanaina criminal cases. Hearings, plea entries, and sentencing are filed in the court file. You can pull these up on CourtView. The Alaska Court System hosts the records portal that opens these files to the public.

Note: Some files are sealed by law, including juvenile and certain protective order cases.

Court records usually carry more detail than the booking sheet. They include charging documents, the criminal complaint, bail orders, and any plea agreement. If you only have a name and a rough date, the court file is the place to start once the case has been arraigned.

Background Checks and Statewide Records

The state's central criminal history repository is run by the Alaska Department of Public Safety. AS 12.62.110 sets up the central repository, and AS 12.62.160 spells out how that data may be released. To request a record, use the DPS Online Criminal History Portal.

For more involved requests, the DPS FOIA Portal accepts public records requests under the Alaska Public Records Act. The Tanaina 72 hour booking data is part of this broader system. Older or archived files may need a separate request to the Alaska State Archives.

What a Tanaina 72 Hour Booking Record Shows

A standard Tanaina 72 hour booking record holds the basic facts of the arrest. That means the full name, date of birth, the time of intake, the charges as filed by the trooper, the case number tied to the booking, and the holding location. It does not show case outcomes. For that you need the court file.

You may also see the bail amount listed by the on-call judge, the next scheduled court date, and any hold flags from other agencies. The booking sheet does not show prior history. For prior records, you would need to pull a full background check through the state criminal history portal.

Victims who want updates can use Alaska Office of Victims' Rights resources to track cases and get help understanding the system.

Tips for Tanaina 72 Hour Booking Searches

When you search by name, try a few spellings. Alaska bookings often list both legal and common names, and small typos can hide a record. Use a date range that covers two days before and after the suspected arrest. The booking may post late if the trooper had a long shift.

If you cannot find a person on VINE, that does not always mean they were released. They may not yet be in the DOC system, or they may have been moved to a hold facility outside the Mat-Su area. Try the Alaska DOC home page to check other jails statewide.

Note: Records can take up to 24 hours to post after a fresh arrest, so check back often during that first day.

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Nearby Mat-Su Communities

Tanaina shares its trooper post, jail, and courthouse with several nearby Mat-Su places. If you cannot find a record for a Tanaina booking, check the same sources for the towns next door. You can also visit the Matanuska-Susitna Borough page for the full list of Mat-Su records info.