Herriman Police Blotter Records
Herriman Police Blotter records give you the city-level path for incident reports, request tracking, and the review rules that apply when a file reaches the records desk. Herriman is a large Salt Lake County city, so a search can move from a city report to a county booking or court file without much delay. That is normal. The city file shows what officers logged. The county record shows custody and booking. The court record shows what happened next. A good search follows that trail in order instead of guessing which office has the answer.
Herriman Quick Facts
Herriman Police Blotter Requests
Herriman keeps its police records through the Herriman City Police Department, and the city gives the public a direct Police Records page for GRAMA requests. That makes the city page the right first stop when you need a police report, an arrest report, or an incident report tied to a Herriman call. The department lists its office at 5355 West Main Street, Herriman, Utah 84096, with non-emergency dispatch at 801-840-4000 and the office line at 801-858-0035. If a call has already been logged, those details help you match the report to the right office fast.
See the city records page at Herriman Police Records. That page is the cleanest path for a Herriman Police Blotter search because it sits inside the city's own request system. The city police page at Herriman Police Department adds the department's mission and service goals, including a focus on public safety, compassion, and integrity. Those values matter because they show how the city frames both service and records requests.
The records page also explains that requests may be made in person, online, or by mail, and that the department has up to 10 business days to respond. The contact email is records@herrimanpd.gov. For a city police file, that is usually better than guessing which county office might have the same information. Herriman's police page also points to records forms and witness statement forms, which is a good sign that the department expects requests to be specific and tied to the right incident.
This image from Herriman Police Department shows the city's main records entry point for Herriman Police Blotter material.
The page is the right front door for a Herriman request. Use it when you need a city report rather than a county jail entry.
Herriman Police Blotter Records
Once a Herriman incident has been reported, the records can branch in more than one direction. The city file may contain an incident report, an arrest report, or another public record tied to the call. Those are the records the department says it makes available. If you only need to confirm that an event was logged, a city request can be enough. If you need the legal result, you usually need to look farther out to Salt Lake County court records. That split keeps the blotter useful as a lead, but not as the whole story.
Herriman says its police department is committed to upholding the law, protecting life and property, preventing crime, and serving the community with understanding and compassion. The city records page shows that the department accepts records work through GRAMA, and the police services page shows that the department also handles things like fingerprinting and sex offender registration. That tells you the records side is part of a broader public safety operation, which is useful when you are trying to match a call to the right office.
The department also says records are governed by GRAMA and that the city will contact the requester when the request is ready. That matters because a Herriman Police Blotter search is not just about finding a name. It is about getting the right record from the right office. If the file is broad enough to include notes, photos, or other material, the city may still narrow the release to the parts the law allows. Under Utah public records rules, the record can be open even when some pieces stay out of view.
In practice, a good Herriman request should name the report type and the date. If you have a case number, add it. If you only know a person and a rough date, that can still work. The department can use that information to locate the file and tell you whether the records are ready for release.
Salt Lake County Jail Records
When a Herriman arrest moves into county custody, the Salt Lake County Sheriff's Office becomes the next place to check. The county's Jail Dockets and Rosters are a strong lead because they show booking information, but they are not the same thing as a city incident report. That gap matters. A name may not show at first, then appear once the county has processed the intake. The county roster can be searched by name, booking number, or date range, so you can keep the search narrow.
Salt Lake County's rosters page at Salt Lake County Jail Dockets and Rosters can show the arrest date, booking number, charges, bail amount, and housing status. The sheriff's office says the online locator is updated regularly throughout the day, and that sensitive material may require a formal GRAMA request. That makes the county jail page a good second step when a Herriman Police Blotter entry has already moved out of the city file.
For a regional county view, Unified Police Department records can also matter if the incident was handled in a nearby contract or unincorporated area. The UPD records page at Unified Police Department records request explains that requests for reports and incident records must go through the webform or records line, with pick-up by appointment at the sheriff's administration building. If a Herriman search turns into a regional question, that county tool may answer it faster than a city request.
To pull the right county record, ask for the name, date of birth if known, and the approximate booking date. If you already have a booking number, use it. That small detail often cuts the search time in half and keeps you from chasing the wrong person in a busy county roster.
Herriman Police Blotter and GRAMA
GRAMA controls how Herriman and Salt Lake County decide what to release. The law starts with a presumption of access, but it also gives agencies room to protect privacy and investigation integrity. Under Utah Code Title 63G Chapter 2, agencies can classify material as public, private, protected, or controlled. That means a Herriman Police Blotter record may be public while witness names, sensitive details, or active-investigation notes stay withheld.
Response timing matters too. Utah law gives agencies ten business days to answer a written request, and five business days for expedited requests when the request qualifies. Herriman's GRAMA document says the department may redact private, protected, or controlled material before it is made available to the public. The city and county can still ask for more time when the file is large or needs review. That is normal. It does not mean the request is lost. It means the office is checking what it can release and what must stay back for now.
The Herriman records page says requests may be made in person, online, or by mail, and that the city will notify the requester when the file is ready. That gives you a clean way to follow the file without guessing. If the record is a statewide criminal history matter rather than a local report, the next stop is the Utah Bureau of Criminal Identification at Utah BCI criminal records. That path is different from a city report request, but it matters when the Herriman blotter question turns into a broader criminal history question.
Note: A Herriman request can reach the right office quickly, but the record can still be partly redacted if GRAMA or case status requires it.
Herriman Court Records
Once the arrest becomes a filed case, the court record takes over. The Utah court system keeps the next layer of the story, including filings, hearing dates, plea information, and the outcome of the case. If you are tracing a Herriman Police Blotter event from start to finish, you should expect to move from the city records page to the Salt Lake County jail roster and then to the Utah courts record system.
The state courts records page at Utah courts records is the best statewide starting point for that work. It is also the right place to look when you need a court case number that is not on the booking page. Older case work may point to the Utah State Archives as well, especially if the file has been moved out of the active court system. That helps when the Herriman incident is not recent and the current jail tools do not show anything useful anymore.
Searches go faster when the city, county, and court pieces line up. A city report tells you what happened. The county jail page tells you where the person was booked. The court file tells you what the system did with the charge. That three-step path is the cleanest way to keep a Herriman Police Blotter search from getting stuck halfway through.
Request Details
If you are asking Herriman for a report, keep the request narrow and plain. The city and county offices both work better when they can match the file fast. That is true for city reports and for county booking data. A precise request also helps if the city has to review the record for redactions before release. Herriman's police records page is built around this kind of request, so the more exact your details, the better the department can respond.
Include the basic facts below when you can:
- Full name of the person involved
- Approximate date of the incident or arrest
- Report, booking, or case number if known
- Your contact information for the response
Herriman's police records page says the department will contact the requester when the request is ready. That is good practice here. The clearer the ask, the faster the city can tell you whether the file is public, partly redacted, or still under review.
Salt Lake County and City Links
Herriman sits in Salt Lake County, so most searches eventually point back to the county jail or the county court. Use the county page when the record left the city desk and moved into a broader custody or court file. Use the nearby city pages when the incident began somewhere else in Salt Lake County or the request needs a local police department instead of Herriman.
Nearby Utah Cities
Nearby city pages can help when a Herriman incident crossed a municipal line or when the arresting officer was from another department in Salt Lake County. Use the city page that matches the agency first, then compare it with the county file.