Schoharie County Police Records Search

Schoharie County police records are maintained by the Sheriff's Office in the village of Schoharie. This rural county in central New York has a small population and limited local police coverage. The Sheriff's Office is the primary law enforcement agency for most of the county. Records include incident reports, arrest logs, accident reports, and investigation files available through FOIL requests.

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Schoharie County Police Records Overview

29,714 Population
Schoharie County Seat
$0.25 Per Page Fee
5 Days FOIL Response

Schoharie County Sheriff's Office Records

The Schoharie County Sheriff's Office is at 157 Depot Lane, Schoharie, NY 12157. The phone number is 518-295-8114. The Sheriff runs road patrol, criminal investigations, civil process, and the county jail. Police records from deputies are kept at this location.

To get records, file a written FOIL request with the Records Access Officer. Include the date, location, and names tied to your request. The office must respond in five business days. Copies cost $0.25 per page. The office has limited staff, so complex requests may take longer than the initial five-day window. In that case, they must send a written acknowledgment with a time estimate.

The New York State Police have a presence in Schoharie County. They handle many calls in rural parts of the county. State Police records are held at the Central Record Bureau in Albany. File requests through the State Police FOIL portal. Reports cost $15.00 each.

Schoharie County Sheriff's Office website for police records

FOIL stands for the Freedom of Information Law. It is in Article 6 of the NYS Public Officers Law, Sections 84 through 90. The law says government records are open to the public unless a specific exemption applies. All police agencies in New York fall under this law.

Put your request in writing. No special form is needed, but some agencies have their own. State what records you want, when the event happened, and who was involved. Mail or deliver it to the Records Access Officer at the right agency.

The agency has five business days to respond. They can release the records, deny them with written reasons, or send a notice saying they need more time. If denied, you can appeal within 30 days. The appeals officer has ten business days to decide. If the appeal also fails, you have four months to bring a court action. The Committee on Open Government issues advisory opinions that may help.

Types of Police Records in Schoharie County

Incident reports document each call or event that officers respond to. They show the date, time, location, and a summary of what happened. Arrest records contain charges, booking details, and bail data. Accident reports cover motor vehicle crashes. Investigation files hold case notes, evidence logs, and witness statements.

Not all records can be released. Under Public Officers Law Section 87(2), agencies can hold back records that would hurt an active investigation, reveal a confidential source, show non-routine techniques, or put someone at risk. They must release any parts that are not exempt. Redacting is common. Sealed court records and juvenile records are off limits.

New York's Clean Slate Act took effect November 16, 2024. It directs the Office of Court Administration to seal certain old conviction records over three years. Sex crimes and non-drug Class A felonies are excluded. Law enforcement retains full access to all records.

Statewide Databases for Schoharie County Police Records

Several state databases can help with records tied to Schoharie County. The WebCrims system shows pending criminal cases in most New York courts. Search by name or case number. The eCourts WebCivil Supreme portal covers civil cases in Supreme Court across all 62 counties.

The Division of Criminal Justice Services (DCJS) is the only source of official state criminal history records. You must submit fingerprints. These records are not public and cannot be released under FOIL. Private record search firms pull data from public court databases, not DCJS.

The Sex Offender Registry lists Level 2 and Level 3 offenders by name, address, or county. Call 1-800-262-3257 any time. The DOCCS Incarcerated/Parolee Lookup covers state prison and parole. County jail inmates are not in that system.

The New York State Police handle cases statewide. Their reports cost $15.00 each under Public Officers Law Section 66-a. Motor vehicle crash reports can be ordered from the DMV Crash Report Sales Portal for $7.00 search plus $15.00 per report.

Fees for Schoharie County Police Records

Copy fees follow state law at $0.25 per page for items up to 9 by 14 inches. Larger formats cost the actual reproduction price. If a request takes more than two hours of staff time, the agency can charge for labor. State Police reports cost $15.00 each. The OCA criminal history search is $95.00 per name. DMV crash reports run $7.00 search plus $15.00 per report. Always confirm fees with the specific agency before sending payment.

Nearby Counties

Schoharie County borders several counties in central New York.

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