Arlington Police Records Lookup

Arlington police records are managed by the Arlington Police Department Records Division at 620 W. Division Street. The city has more than 395,000 residents and sits in Tarrant County between Fort Worth and Dallas. If you want to look up an incident report, get a copy of a crash report, or find case details from APD, you can do it through the city's online portal, by mail, or in person at the main station. The department processes about 120,000 reports each year. Arlington police records are public under the Texas Public Information Act, with some limits for open investigations.

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Arlington Overview

395K+ Population
Tarrant County
$6.00 Report Fee
120K Reports/Year

Arlington Police Records Division

The Arlington Police Department Records Division is at the APD Main Station, 620 W. Division Street, Arlington, TX 76011. The office handles all offense reports, incident reports, accident reports, and supplemental files. It is open Monday through Friday from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM. You can call (817) 459-5678 for report status or general questions.

Around 20 staff members run the Records Division. APD uses the Motorola PremierOne system for records management. Reports are stored electronically, though some older files may still be on paper. Bring a valid government-issued photo ID when you come in. Spanish language help is available. Most reports show up 5 to 7 business days after the incident date.

Office Arlington Police Department Records Division
Address 620 W. Division Street
Arlington, TX 76011
Phone (817) 459-5678
Hours Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM
Website arlingtonpd.org

Crime victims get one free copy of their report. Rush processing is an option if you pay the extra fee. Records are kept based on the schedules from the Texas State Library and Archives Commission.

There are several ways to get police records in Arlington. The City of Arlington has an open records portal at arlingtontx.gov/open-records. That is the fastest way to start. Fill out the form with the date, location, and names tied to the incident.

You can also email requests to police.records@arlingtonpd.org. Mail requests go to APD Records Division, 620 W. Division Street, Arlington, TX 76011. The department must respond within 10 business days under Texas Government Code Chapter 552. If APD wants to withhold records, they have to get an Attorney General opinion within that same 10-day window. You never need to explain why you want the records.

In person, just go to the Records Division at the main station on Division Street. Bring your ID and be ready to tell staff what you are looking for. If you have a report number, that makes things go quicker. APD redacts personal details like Social Security numbers and medical data before handing over files.

Note: Records from cases still under investigation may be withheld under Texas Government Code Section 552.108.

The Arlington Police Department website provides information about records requests, crime data, and department services.

Arlington Police Records Department website

From here you can find the open records portal, patrol district info, and links to Crime Stoppers.

Arlington Police Records Fees

Arlington police records fees follow state law. A standard incident or offense report costs $6.00 per copy. Certified copies are $8.00 each. Accident reports have the same pricing.

Other costs include $0.10 per page for standard paper copies and $0.15 for legal size. CDs or DVDs cost $1.00 each. For requests that take a lot of staff time, labor is charged at $15.00 per hour after the first two hours, with 20% overhead added. If the total is more than $40.00, you get an estimate first. The first 50 pages are free when the records sit in one location.

  • Standard report: $6.00
  • Certified report: $8.00
  • Paper copies: $0.10 per page
  • Electronic media: $1.00 per disc
  • Labor: $15.00 per hour (after first 2 hours)

You can pay at the office with cash, check, money order, or credit card. By mail, send a check or money order payable to the City of Arlington.

Arlington Accident Reports

APD officers file crash reports within 10 days under Texas Transportation Code Section 550.065. Those reports feed into the statewide TxDOT CRIS database. Crash reports stay confidential for 60 days before they become public.

You can search and buy Arlington accident reports through CRIS online. Use the name of someone involved, their driver license number, or a VIN to find the report. Standard copies cost $6.00 and certified ones are $8.00. You can also ask the Records Division directly for a crash report. Give them the date, time, location, and names of people involved.

For crashes on I-20, I-30, or TX-360, the responding agency might be Texas DPS rather than APD. In that case, search CRIS or contact DPS for the report. The APD Traffic Unit handles its own serious injury and fatal crash investigations.

What Arlington Police Reports Show

An Arlington police report starts with the date, time, and address of the incident. The victim or complainant section has names, dates of birth, contact info, and statements. Suspect info includes a name (if known), physical description, and clothing details. Witnesses are listed with their contact information and statements.

The officer narrative walks through the events, what was observed, and what action was taken. Property sections document stolen, damaged, or recovered items. Vehicle info covers year, make, model, color, plate, and VIN. Offense codes tie to the Texas Penal Code. Disposition codes show the case status. Each report also has the officer's name, badge number, and unit assignment. Evidence notes tell you if photos or fingerprints were taken at the scene.

Supplemental reports are added over time. They may include follow-up interviews, lab results, or arrest details. Request them using the original report number.

Arlington Police Patrol Districts

APD splits the city into four patrol districts. Each one has a station for local response. The department also runs a Real Time Information Center for live monitoring of incidents. Specialized units include SWAT, homicide, and narcotics.

The four districts are North at 2201 N. Collins St, South at 5230 W. Arkansas Lane, East at 1100 SW Green Oaks Blvd, and West at 2060 W. Green Oaks Blvd. All police records from every district flow into the same Motorola PremierOne system. It does not matter which district took the initial report. Requests all go through the Records Division on Division Street.

For non-emergency calls, use (817) 459-5600. Crime Stoppers takes anonymous tips at (817) 469-TIPS. The VINE system lets you track custody changes for someone connected to a case. The Texas DPS Crime Records Division provides statewide criminal history searches at $3.00 per name-based query. The TDCJ Offender Search shows state prison inmates.

Note: Body camera requests go through APD Professional Standards, not the Records Division.

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Tarrant County Police Records

Arlington is in Tarrant County. The Tarrant County Sheriff's Office covers areas outside city limits and manages the county jail. For county records and court filings, check the Tarrant County page.

View Tarrant County Police Records

Nearby Cities

Arlington sits between Fort Worth and Dallas. These nearby cities have their own police departments and records:

Fort WorthDallasGrand PrairieMansfieldIrving