Humboldt County, California
Seat: Eureka
California
- There is NO single statewide California court case search. Each Superior Court runs its own — you must search county by county. The "Find My Court" portal links to each county but does not search across them.
- California has some of the strictest privacy laws in the country. Many police departments refuse name-based report searches, accepting only report-number requests. Always call the records division first and ask: do you release name-based searches to the public, or only report-number requests?
- SB 1421 (2019) and SB 16 (2022) made certain police misconduct records public for the first time: sustained findings of dishonesty, sexual assault by an officer, and serious use-of-force incidents. Worth requesting if relevant.
- Megan's Law site requires acknowledging a usage agreement before each search and prohibits copy/print. You can search by name, address, or zip but the data is harder to capture for your records.
- In LA County, jurisdiction is split: LAPD covers only the City of LA. LA Sheriff (LASD) covers unincorporated areas plus 40+ contract cities like Compton, Lancaster, and Lakewood. Where the conduct happened determines which agency holds the report.
- Marriage and divorce records are filed at the county Recorder/Clerk level, not at a state registry. CDPH only holds informational copies for marriages since 1949.
- ASSESSORS — NO ONLINE OWNER NAME SEARCH: CA Gov Code 6254.21 prohibits county assessors from posting owner names online. AB 1785 (Dec 2024) further removed online APN search in many counties. All CA assessor sources are address/APN search only. For name-based ownership research, use the county RECORDER (deeds, liens, mortgages) — not the assessor.
- LA COUNTY RECORDER — NO ONLINE ACCESS: Unlike most CA counties, LA County Registrar-Recorder provides NO online access to recorded documents (Gov Code 6254.21). All deed and lien research for LA County requires in-person visit to LAX, Van Nuys, Lancaster, or Norwalk offices, or phone request at (800) 201-8999. Call before visiting.
- COURT NAME SEARCH FEES: Riverside Superior Court (epublic-access.riverside.courts.ca.gov) and San Bernardino Superior Court (cap.sb-court.org) charge search credits for online name lookups — not free. Case number searches remain free on both. Sacramento Superior Court criminal name search is free (no credits required).
Run this in order.
Start with the systems most likely to change your read of a person. Then cross-check custody, registries, and paper-trail sources before you go wider.
Start with courts
Run county and statewide court portals first. Civil, criminal, family, and lower-court systems are often separate, so this is where most missed records happen.
Check custody and registries
Use jail, corrections, and registry systems to catch records that do not show up in a normal court search.
Pull the paper trail
Recorder, assessor, prosecutor, records-request, and licensing sources help verify addresses, liens, ownership, agency records, and local context.
Run the federal backstop
Federal court and incarceration systems sit outside local portals. Run them before you decide the search is clean.
California's Public Records Act (Gov. Code § 7920 et seq., formerly § 6250) is broad on paper but slower in practice — many agencies take 30 to 60 days, some longer. The biggest structural limit: California has NO unified statewide court case search. Each county's Superior Court runs its own portal, with wildly different interfaces and access rules. SB 1421 (2019) and SB 16 (2022) opened up some previously-sealed police misconduct and use-of-force records, which is meaningful for vetting work in safety contexts.
Typical response · 14 to 60 days for most records-request agencies; instant for online court and registry lookups (where available)