Kalifornsky Jail Mugshots Database
Kalifornsky jail mugshots cover booking photos taken after arrests by the Alaska State Troopers Soldotna post for calls in the Kalifornsky area. This page shows how to search Kalifornsky jail mugshots, find custody status through VINE, and pull a case file on CourtView. Kalifornsky is an unincorporated community in the Kenai Peninsula Borough. The main holding jail is the Wildwood Correctional Complex in Kenai. Use the free tools below to track an inmate, check court dates, or file a records request for a Kalifornsky booking photo.
Kalifornsky Jail Mugshots Facts
Kalifornsky Jail Mugshots Lookup
Kalifornsky is an unincorporated area along Kalifornsky Beach Road in the Kenai Peninsula Borough. It has no city police of its own. The Alaska State Troopers Soldotna post is the main law agency that takes calls in Kalifornsky. The post phone is (907) 262-4455. Troopers book people at the Wildwood Correctional Complex in Kenai. That is where most Kalifornsky jail mugshots start. The booking file holds the photo and the arrest report.
The fastest free way to find Kalifornsky jail mugshots and custody status is VINE. Go to vinelink.com and search by first and last name. VINE is free, runs 24/7, and updates every 15 minutes for jail facilities. You can set up text or email alerts when custody status changes. VINE shows the name, the facility, and the charges on file for the held person.
Kalifornsky jail mugshots are not posted to any public web page. To get the booking photo, you file a public records request with the Alaska Department of Corrections or with the Alaska State Troopers. State records are released under AS 40.25.100 through AS 40.25.295. Spell out "booking photograph" and list the full name plus booking date so staff can pull the right file from the Wildwood system.
The Kenai Police Department page is a near-by local source for Kalifornsky jail mugshots when an arrest ties to a call inside the Kenai city line just north of Kalifornsky.
Wildwood Correctional Complex
The Wildwood Correctional Complex is at 10 Chugach Avenue, Kenai, AK 99611. The main phone is (907) 260-7200. The Alaska Department of Corrections runs the complex. Wildwood has about 449 beds spread across the main complex and the adjacent Pre-Trial Facility. It is the main state jail for the central Kenai Peninsula. Most Kalifornsky arrests end at Wildwood for booking and short-term hold.
A Wildwood booking record holds fields like booking number, date and time, inmate name, date of birth, sex, race, height, weight, hair and eye color, home address, charges with AS code cites, warrant data, bail amount, and next court date. The mugshot image is filed with the booking record but is not posted on a public site. Staff can confirm by phone if a person is in custody. For Kalifornsky jail mugshots, the Wildwood file is the main source.
Visits are by set hours and by the inmate's approved list. Bring a valid photo ID. No phones or bags past the lobby. Lockers are on site for valuables. Dress code bars gang colors, see-through tops, and short skirts. Call the facility ahead of time to check the visit block, since the rules shift with facility head count and court schedule.
Note: Kalifornsky jail mugshots may be held back under AS 40.25.120 privacy rules if the state finds no clear public interest basis for release.
Alaska Troopers Kalifornsky Records
The Alaska State Troopers cover Kalifornsky under Detachment C. The Soldotna post at (907) 262-4455 takes most of the calls in the central peninsula. The Kenai post at (907) 283-4506 also covers parts of the area. Troopers write the arrest report, take the booking photo, and drive the person to Wildwood. Trooper files are held by the Alaska Department of Public Safety. The DPS records portal is the main file pickup point.
To file a records request for a trooper file, use the DPS portal at dpsalaska.justfoia.com. Set up an account, file a new request, and track the status online. The portal sends email alerts as each step clears. Most files are released in 10 working days under AS 40.25.110. Fees apply after 5 hours of staff time. The main dps.alaska.gov page has the full list of state law contacts.
Troopers post a public daily dispatch at dailydispatch.dps.alaska.gov. The feed lists arrests and incidents by date and place. You can filter by Soldotna or Kenai Peninsula to find Kalifornsky entries. Each post lists the date, the place, the charge, and the name. The dispatch is a good first stop before you file a full records request.
The Kenai Police records request form is the nearest city-level option for Kalifornsky jail mugshots tied to arrests that cross over into the Kenai grid just north.
Kalifornsky Court Records
Kalifornsky criminal cases are filed at the Alaska Court System office in Kenai. The clerk phone is (907) 283-3110. The Kenai court sits in the Third Judicial District. Every criminal charge from a Kalifornsky arrest lands here first. The court file shows charges, bail, hearing dates, and the jail where the person is held. Court files are the best way to tie a Kalifornsky jail mugshot to a charge and a court date.
CourtView is the free online case search at records.courts.alaska.gov. Search by name, case number, ticket number, or hearing date. Most cases from 1990 on are in the system. Older files need a phone call or a mail-in form to the Kenai clerk. For certified copies, use the court form set on the state site at public.courts.alaska.gov.
Copy fees are $2.50 per page for uncertified pages. Certified copies cost $5 plus $2.50 per page. Juvenile cases are closed under AS 47.12. Sealed cases need a judge's order to open. The court does not hand out mugshots, but the file tells you which jail has the record on hand.
Kalifornsky Records Access
The Alaska Public Records Act sits at AS 40.25.100 through AS 40.25.295. This is the state law that sets how Kalifornsky jail mugshots and other files are released. Agencies have 10 working days to answer a first request. Fees apply after 5 hours of staff time. Photocopy fees stack on top of that. A short written request is best. List the full name, the date, and the type of record you want.
Criminal history checks are held by the Alaska DPS Criminal Records and Identification Bureau. Name checks cost $20. Fingerprint checks cost $35. The release of criminal justice data is under AS 12.62.160. Victim data is closed under AS 12.62.180. Warrant rules are at AS 12.25.010. The Alaska Department of Law APRA page has full state guidance. The statute text is on the Alaska Legislature site.
Some Kalifornsky files stay closed. Juvenile files are off limits under AS 47.12. Sealed cases need a court order. Active case files may be held back while the case is still open. The public part of a case file often still has the core booking data and the charges. Mental health holds are closed under state law.
Note: Requests for Kalifornsky jail mugshots should list the booking date, full name, and case number to cut wait time at Wildwood.
Kalifornsky Jail Mugshots Alerts
For Kalifornsky cases that move to federal court, use the Federal Bureau of Prisons inmate locator at bop.gov/inmateloc. The BOP tool tracks federal inmates from 1982 on. Alaska has no federal prison, so federal defendants from the Kenai Peninsula are held out of state. Family can watch both VINE and the BOP locator side by side.
The Alaska DOC main site is at doc.alaska.gov. It has the full jail list, visit rules, and contact info for each facility. The page also has the DOC records request form. For civil files and tort claim info tied to a Kalifornsky arrest, start at law.alaska.gov. The state law page is the base point for civil state records.
Nearby qualifying cities with their own page include Nikiski, just north across the Kenai River. For the full list of local police and court stops that may tie back to a Kalifornsky arrest, check the Kenai Peninsula Borough page on this site.