Flint People Search Records

Flint is the county seat of Genesee County with a population over 95,000. A people search in Flint draws on records from the City of Flint, the Genesee County Clerk, the Seventh Judicial Circuit Court, and state databases that span all 83 Michigan counties. As the county seat, Flint is where the main county offices sit, which means the clerk, the circuit court, and the Register of Deeds are all right in the city. This gives Flint residents and searchers easy access to a wide range of public records.

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Flint at a Glance

95K+ Population
Genesee County
Seventh Circuit Court System
67th District District Court

The City of Flint runs its own government departments that hold records useful for a people search. The main city website at cityofflint.com is the starting point for city-level searches. From here you can reach the city clerk, the police department, and other offices that keep public files. Flint is one of the few Michigan cities outside of Detroit that maintains a substantial set of city-level records separate from the county.

The Flint city homepage at cityofflint.com connects to city departments and local services.

City of Flint homepage for people search records

Use this site to find the city clerk, police records, and other departments that hold public records for Flint.

The city clerk handles local elections, business licenses, and some public records at the city level. The police department keeps arrest records, incident reports, and other law enforcement files. Under MCL 15.231, both offices must respond to public records requests. For a Flint people search, checking city departments alongside county offices gives you more sources to work with. The city keeps records that the county may not always have, such as police reports and local permits.

Note: Flint city departments and Genesee County offices both hold records useful for a people search, so check both for the best results.

Genesee County Clerk Records

The Genesee County Clerk handles vital records, court filings, and other public documents for Flint and the entire county. The office is in downtown Flint at the county courthouse. It keeps birth certificates, death records, marriage licenses, and assumed name filings. The Genesee County Clerk website has forms, fees, and contact details for each service.

Because Flint is the county seat, the clerk office is right in the city. That makes it easy to walk in and request records in person. Staff can search by name and date. Certified copies of vital records run about $15 to $25. These fees are set by state law. Marriage licenses become public once the ceremony is done and the paperwork is filed with the clerk. Birth and death records go back many years.

The Genesee County Register of Deeds is another resource for searching local records. It covers property documents and other files held at the county level. Between the clerk office, the Register of Deeds, and state tools, you can run a thorough Flint people search from multiple angles.

Search Flint Court Records

Court records for Flint are held by two courts. The Seventh Judicial Circuit Court handles felonies, major civil cases, and family law for all of Genesee County. The 67th District Court covers Flint for misdemeanors, traffic tickets, and small claims. Under MCL 600.1420, records in both courts are open to the public. Anyone can search by name.

The Seventh Circuit Court website at 7thcircuitcourt.com has information on case types, filing procedures, and how to access records. The court sits in downtown Flint at the county courthouse. For a people search, the circuit court is where you find serious criminal cases, divorce filings, and large civil lawsuits. The court processes a high volume of cases each year given the population of Genesee County.

The 67th District Court handles the lower-level cases. Traffic offenses, petty misdemeanors, and small claims all go through this court. If someone had a minor run-in with law enforcement in Flint, the record is most likely here. Checking both courts is the best way to get a complete picture of someone's court history in the Flint area.

The statewide MiCOURT case search covers both Genesee County courts and courts across all of Michigan. It is free and does not need an account. Search by name to see results from circuit, district, and probate courts statewide. MiCOURT is one of the best free tools for a Flint people search.

Flint Criminal History Search

The Michigan State Police runs ICHAT, the state criminal history search tool. Under MCL 28.261a, it must stay open to the public. Each search costs $10. Visit apps.michigan.gov/ICHAT to run a search by name. ICHAT returns any criminal convictions in Michigan, including Genesee County cases from Flint. Results come back fast and show charges, conviction dates, and the court that handled each case.

OTIS is the Michigan Department of Corrections offender tracking system at mdocweb.state.mi.us/otis2. It is free. OTIS tracks anyone currently in state prison, on parole, or on probation. The sex offender registry at mspsor.com is also free and shows registered offenders by name or location. Between ICHAT, OTIS, and the registry, you can run a solid criminal background check on someone tied to Flint.

Flint has a busy criminal justice system given its size. The city's police department generates a large number of arrests each year, many of which end up as cases in the Seventh Circuit or 67th District Court. Using both court searches and ICHAT together gives you the most complete view of someone's criminal history in the area.

Note: ICHAT shows convictions only. It does not include pending charges or arrests that did not lead to a conviction in Michigan.

Public Records and FOIA in Flint

Michigan's Freedom of Information Act under MCL 15.231 gives anyone the right to request records from government offices. In Flint, you can file FOIA requests with the city government, the police department, and Genesee County offices. You write a request describing the records you need. The office has five business days to respond. Most government records are open to the public.

The Flint Police Department keeps arrest logs, incident reports, and other law enforcement files that can be requested through FOIA. The city clerk handles local government records. Genesee County offices cover court files, land records, and vital records at the county level. Fees depend on the size of the request and must be reasonable under state law. If a request is denied, you can appeal the decision or challenge it in court.

FOIA can reach records that no online database covers. Inspection files, permits, internal correspondence, and code enforcement records are all examples of what you can request. For a Flint people search, FOIA is a strong backup when the usual search tools come up short.

Flint Vital Records

Vital records for Flint are held by the Genesee County Clerk and the Michigan MDHHS. Birth certificates, death records, and marriage licenses can all be used in a people search to confirm names, dates, and family connections. The county clerk office is right in downtown Flint, which makes in-person requests easy. The state office at michigan.gov/mdhhs is another option for ordering copies.

Fees for certified copies are set by state law and run about $15 to $25 depending on the record type. The county clerk usually processes in-person requests faster than the state office. Call ahead to confirm the record is on file before visiting. VitalChek is also available as an online vendor, though it adds a service fee on top of the standard charge.

Genesee County Resources

Flint is the county seat of Genesee County. That means the county clerk, circuit court, and Register of Deeds are all located in the city. Visit the Genesee County people search page for full details on county offices, phone numbers, addresses, and links to online search tools. The page covers everything from court records to land files and vital records for the entire county.

Genesee County has about 400,000 residents. Flint is the largest city in the county by a wide margin. Because the county offices are right in Flint, residents do not have to drive far to access records in person. The courthouse complex in downtown Flint houses the clerk, the circuit court, and several other county departments all in one area.

Nearby Cities

These larger Michigan cities have their own people search pages. Flint sits in mid-Michigan, between Detroit to the south and Lansing to the west.

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