Marysville Bench Warrants Lookup

Marysville bench warrants are signed by judges when a person fails to appear at Marysville Municipal Court or skips a required step in a local case. You can run a Marysville warrant search through the state courts data warehouse, the Marysville Municipal Court site, and the Snohomish County court tools. Most searches only need a name. A date of birth helps narrow the list. Marysville is the second largest city in Snohomish County and runs its own court. The city also shares warrant data with the county and state.

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Marysville Bench Warrants Overview

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Marysville Municipal Court

Marysville Municipal Court handles city code cases filed by Marysville Police. That covers traffic, DUI, domestic violence, theft, and small misdemeanors. The court site has a digital records center and an electronic warrant recall form. The court clerk can confirm if a Marysville bench warrant is active. Staff cannot give legal advice. The phone line is the fastest way to reach a live clerk.

If a warrant is tied to a DUI, a DV case, or a no bail warrant, the electronic recall form will not work. You must file a written motion and wait for a judge to review it. For all other cases, the court waives the $50 recall fee and processes the request within seven business days. Once the recall is approved, the clerk mails or emails a new hearing date and a Zoom link. Felony cases move up to the Snohomish County Superior Court and are not handled by the city court.

Note: A Marysville bench warrant stays active until the court quashes it, the person is arrested, or the judge closes the case.

Marysville Bench Warrants Search Tools

The first stop for a Marysville warrant lookup is the Washington Courts Data Warehouse. The tool runs a name search across most district, municipal, and superior courts in the state. You can filter by court so you only see Marysville and Snohomish County results. The portal shows case number, charge, court date, and warrant flag if one is set.

Try the data warehouse for a fast name based Marysville warrant search.

Marysville bench warrants Washington courts data warehouse

The data warehouse pulls active warrant flags and case info from Marysville, Snohomish County, and courts across Washington.

For courts that use the Odyssey case system, the Odyssey portal is a second route. You can also reach the main Washington Courts site for forms, case search, and court contact info.

How to Quash a Marysville Warrant

If you find an outstanding warrant in your name, do not wait. Call a lawyer. The lawyer can ask the court to quash the warrant and set a new court date. Marysville offers an online warrant recall form that covers most misdemeanor cases. The form is on the court website. The clerk will process the request within seven business days and mail a new hearing date.

Some warrants cannot be cleared online. DV, DUI, Physical Control, and No Bail warrants need a written motion. A judge must review the motion before the warrant is recalled. The court rules are set in CrRLJ 2.2, which you can read on the courts.wa.gov rules page. For a motion to quash, the standard forms are on the Washington Courts forms page.

Bring a valid photo ID and your case number. Court staff may ask you to confirm your address before they process the recall. Walk-in warrant calendars are not the standard at Marysville Municipal Court. Most recalls are handled by mail or by Zoom after the clerk approves the request.

DOC and Snohomish County Warrant Lists

Not every warrant is on the city court site. The Washington Department of Corrections runs its own warrant list under RCW 9.94A.716 on apps.leg.wa.gov/rcw. If a person is on community custody and breaks the rules of release, the DOC can issue a warrant. The DOC warrant search is free and open to the public.

The DOC also runs a wanted and absconder list. The list shows photos and case info for the most current escapees and absconders in Washington State.

Snohomish County runs its own warrant and court tools. Most Marysville cases also show up through the county district and superior courts. You can reach both through the state data warehouse or the county site.

Marysville bench warrants DOC warrant search

The DOC warrant search returns a list of people with active community custody warrants tied to RCW 9.94A.716 violations.

WATCH Criminal History Check

The Washington State Patrol runs a public tool called WATCH. WATCH stands for Washington Access to Criminal History. It lets the public run a name based search of the state criminal record system at fortress.wa.gov/wsp/watch. There is a small fee for the full record check. A name only search returns less data but is still helpful for a Marysville warrant lookup.

WATCH does not show every active bench warrant. It does show prior conviction data and some active case info. You can read more about the system on the WSP criminal history page.

Types of Marysville Warrants

Not every warrant is the same. A bench warrant is issued during a case after a person fails to appear. An arrest warrant is issued at the start of a case when there is probable cause. A DOC warrant is for people on community custody who break the rules. A no bail warrant is the most serious; the judge will not set bail and the person must be held until a hearing. CrR 2.2 and CrRLJ 2.2 lay out the steps a judge must take.

Most Marysville warrants can be cleared. A lawyer can help you file a motion, set bail, or ask for a walk-in hearing. Call the court clerk to confirm which path fits your case.

Note: Always call local law enforcement if you see a wanted person in Marysville; never try to make the arrest yourself.

Public Access Rules in Marysville

Most Marysville court records are public. The state Public Records Act, RCW 42.56, sets the rule that state records are open. Court rule GR 31 says case files are open unless a judge seals them. You do not need a reason. You do not need to show ID. Bench warrant data is part of the case file, so most of it is public and searchable online.

Some data is held back. Juvenile warrants are not in the public system. Sealed cases do not show. Social security numbers and bank info are redacted. The court clerk can tell you if a case is sealed or if a record is limited.

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