Wyandot County Felony Records Search

Wyandot County felony records are maintained at the Court of Common Pleas in Upper Sandusky, Ohio. This small county in north-central Ohio has one of the lowest populations in the state, but it still maintains a full court system that handles felony criminal cases. The Clerk of Courts stores all official case documents, and you can access them in person at the courthouse or through statewide search tools. If you need to check a felony conviction, find case details, or get copies of court documents from Wyandot County, there are several ways to do it.

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Wyandot County Overview

1845 Founded
Upper Sandusky County Seat
$22 BCI Check Fee
ORC 149.43 Public Records Law

Wyandot County Clerk Felony Records

The Wyandot County Clerk of Courts manages all official records for the Court of Common Pleas. Criminal, civil, domestic relations, and appellate cases are all filed here. For felony records, the Clerk holds indictments, court orders, sentencing entries, and every document created during a felony case.

Visit the office in Upper Sandusky to request records in person. Plain copies cost about $0.10 to $0.25 per page. Certified copies with the court seal cost more and serve as official legal documents. You can also send a mail request. Include the defendant's name, case number if available, and a self-addressed stamped envelope.

Wyandot County is one of Ohio's smallest counties. The Clerk's office handles far fewer cases than most, which usually means fast service and personal attention. Ohio's public records law under ORC 149.43 guarantees access. You do not need to be part of a case or explain why you want the records.

Felony Cases in Wyandot County Common Pleas

The Wyandot County Court of Common Pleas General Division tries all felony criminal cases. The process starts when someone gets arrested on felony charges. A preliminary hearing takes place at the Upper Sandusky Municipal Court. If the judge finds probable cause, the case transfers to Common Pleas for grand jury review.

Each felony case generates a full set of records. The arraignment, pre-trial hearings, plea documents, trial transcripts, and sentencing entries are all kept on file. Wyandot County's felony docket is one of the lightest in the state given its small population. Drug offenses and property crimes come up most often. The court holds sessions at the Wyandot County Courthouse in Upper Sandusky.

Ohio Supreme Court system for Wyandot County felony case appeals

The Ohio Supreme Court sits at the top of the court system. Appeals from Wyandot County go to the Third District Court of Appeals in Lima first.

The Wyandot County Sheriff's Office keeps arrest records, incident reports, and jail booking data. The office runs the Wyandot County Jail and tracks charges, bond amounts, and release dates for everyone processed.

Local background checks through the Sheriff cover Wyandot County only. For a full Ohio criminal history, the BCI WebCheck system costs $22. Add an FBI check for national results. Most law enforcement records are available to the public under ORC 149.43. Active investigation files may be held back until a case closes.

Note: In a small county like Wyandot, the Sheriff's Office is often the main law enforcement agency for most of the unincorporated areas.

Upper Sandusky Municipal Court Records

The Upper Sandusky Municipal Court handles preliminary felony hearings, misdemeanor criminal cases, and traffic offenses for Wyandot County. When a felony arrest occurs, the first court appearance happens here. Bond gets set and the judge reviews probable cause before sending the case to Common Pleas.

Records from the Municipal Court show original charges, bond conditions, and the probable cause finding. These early-stage documents fill in the first part of a felony case timeline. Charges sometimes change between the Municipal Court stage and the grand jury indictment, so checking both courts provides the full picture of a Wyandot County felony case from start to finish.

Sealing Wyandot County Felony Records

Ohio law under ORC Chapter 2953 allows certain felony convictions to be sealed. File a petition at the Wyandot County Court of Common Pleas. The fee is about $50. A hearing follows where the judge decides.

Violent crimes, sex offenses, and felonies with mandatory prison time cannot be sealed. Most other felonies are eligible three years after final discharge. All prison time, probation, post-release control, fines, and restitution must be complete first. The Ohio Legal Help website offers tools to check if a conviction qualifies for sealing. The Ohio DRC maintains separate records for people who served state prison time, with different access rules.

Beyond Wyandot County's local offices, several state agencies can help with felony record searches. The Ohio BCI WebCheck provides formal background checks using fingerprints. This is the most thorough way to get an Ohio criminal history. The Ohio DRC Offender Search is free and shows current and past state prison inmates.

For smaller counties like Wyandot where online court records may be limited, these state tools fill in the gaps. The BCI check covers the whole state and picks up convictions from any Ohio county. It costs $22 for a state check. The DRC search is useful if you think someone served prison time after a felony conviction anywhere in Ohio.

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Nearby Counties

Wyandot County is in north-central Ohio. Felony cases get tried in the county where the crime happened.