Search Stevens County Traffic Ticket Records

Stevens County Traffic Ticket Records usually begin in district court, but the county's court structure also connects to superior court records and appeal rules. That matters because traffic cases here may start as a simple infraction and later need a written mitigation, a contested hearing, or a superior court appeal. If you need to find a ticket, check a hearing date, or request a copy, the county gives you a direct office path. The important part is to use the district court for the live ticket, the clerk for superior court records, and the state court tools when you need a broader check on the file.

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Stevens County Traffic Ticket Records Overview

509-684-5249 District Court
509-684-7575 Clerk
Colville District Court Location
Republic Superior Court Location

Stevens County Traffic Ticket Records Search Tools

Stevens County Traffic Ticket Records are managed through a court system that separates active district court traffic cases from superior court records and appeals. The district court page says it handles misdemeanors, traffic infractions, civil matters, and municipal court functions for Chewelah, Colville, Kettle Falls, and Springdale. That makes the court a practical first stop when the ticket came from one of those local jurisdictions or from county law enforcement. The district court office is in Colville, which keeps the live ticket process in one place even when the underlying citation came from a nearby municipality.

The county infractions page is important because it sets the response rule. A person must respond within 30 days, and a mitigation response can be made in writing. If the case goes contested, the appeal path is available through superior court, but the notice of appeal must be filed within 30 days. That is the kind of detail that shapes the record itself. The case is not just a balance due. It can become a hearing record, a written statement, or a superior court appeal if the driver takes the contest route.

Statewide, the Washington State Courts site and the Washington Courts case search are useful to confirm case numbers or hearing status. They are not substitutes for the local file, but they help if the citation number is partial or the hearing date has changed. In Stevens County, that kind of cross-check is especially useful because the district court and superior court each play a distinct role in the record trail.

Stevens County Traffic Ticket Records Offices

The district court and clerk are the two offices most people need. The district court in Colville handles active traffic matters and also serves several municipal courts. The superior court clerk in Colville keeps the superior records, collects fees, and maintains the permanent files. That division means a traffic search may begin in district court but end with the clerk if the case becomes part of a broader court record.

District Court 215 S Oak St, Rm 213
Colville, WA 99114
509-684-5249
Superior Court 350 E Delaware Ave, Republic, WA 99166
Additional courtroom: 215 S Oak, Rm 209, Colville
509-684-7527
Clerk 215 S Oak St, Rm 206
Colville, WA 99114
509-684-7575
Appeal Timing Notice of appeal must be filed within 30 days

The clerk page is the permanent record office. If the matter is appealed or otherwise becomes part of a superior court file, the clerk preserves that record and can explain the copy path. That matters because Stevens County traffic records do not all stay in one office. The district court handles the live issue, but the clerk holds the archival record and the court finance side of the case. Knowing that split saves time and keeps the request pointed at the right office.

The district court also covers municipal court functions for Chewelah, Colville, Kettle Falls, and Springdale. That gives Stevens County a very practical traffic record structure. A person who got a ticket in one of those cities does not need to guess whether the file belongs to a separate city court. The district court handles it, and the contact number stays the same. In a county with that setup, the search is simpler once the court level is clear.

Stevens County Traffic Ticket Records and Appeal Rules

The infraction page explains how a traffic matter moves once the citation is received. The first deadline is 30 days from the issue date. If the driver wants to mitigate, the response can be written. If the driver contests the infraction and loses, the appeal goes to superior court, but it is an appeal of the record made below, not a new trial. That distinction matters because it tells the user what kind of file to request and where to ask for it.

The clerk gives appeal information, so the clerk is part of the record trail once a case leaves the district court. That is useful for a traffic ticket that has turned into a court appeal or a higher-level record request. The district court and clerk together create a path from citation to decision to archive, which is the most important thing to understand when searching Stevens County Traffic Ticket Records.

If the case is still active, the district court is the office that matters most. If the case has been appealed, the superior court and clerk take over record handling. Stevens County also publishes court information that helps users find hearing dates and local rules without guessing. That is good county practice, but it still leaves the official file in the court that heard the case.

Stevens County Traffic Ticket Records Images

A screenshot from the official Stevens County District Court page shows the Colville office that handles traffic infractions and other limited-jurisdiction matters.

Stevens County Traffic Ticket Records district court page

That image matters because the district court is the live case office for a traffic citation.

A screenshot from the official Stevens County Clerk page shows the office that maintains superior court records.

Stevens County Traffic Ticket Records clerk page

That page is the permanent record source if a traffic matter becomes a superior court file.

A screenshot from the official Stevens County infractions page shows the county's deadline and hearing rule summary.

Stevens County Traffic Ticket Records traffic infractions page

That image is the clearest guide to the response window and the appeal path.

How Stevens County Traffic Ticket Records Move

Stevens County Traffic Ticket Records move from the issuing officer to district court, then to the clerk or superior court if the matter turns into an appeal or a higher-level file. The county's structure makes that path fairly direct. The district court receives the ticket and handles the hearing choices. The clerk preserves the permanent record. Superior court reviews the district court record if an appeal is filed. That sequence is the core of the county's record trail.

The 30-day response rule is the first practical deadline. Once that window closes, the court can treat the matter as committed and move it forward. Because the county allows written mitigation and appeal procedures, the record can change depending on how the user responds. That makes the court pages more important than general internet results. The official pages tell you where the file lives and what the next step should be.

For Stevens County, the safest workflow is simple. Use district court for the live case, the clerk for permanent superior records, and the state search for confirmation. If the citation is already on appeal, the superior court record becomes the main file. That keeps Stevens County Traffic Ticket Records organized around the actual office that owns the document.

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