Contact Clerk of the Court and Comptroller For general information, call 305-275-1155 for the Interactive Voice Response System.
Public Records Requests However, if you are unable to locate the records online, you may submit a Public Records Request form. This form may be submitted by mail to Records Management, Miami-Dade County Clerk of Courts, P.O. Box 14695, Miami, FL 33101 or by email to cocpubreq@miamidade.
Requests should be made online through the Miami-Dade Sheriff's Office Public Records System, and when ready, the recording will be available through there. Allow up to 60 days for your request to be processed. Copies may not be picked up in person.
You are not required to submit a request for public records in writing. If you do not choose to use our online form, you may call 305-499-8729 with your request.
Public Records Requests However, if you are unable to locate the records online, you may submit a Public Records Request form. This form may be submitted by mail to Records Management, Miami-Dade County Clerk of Courts, P.O. Box 14695, Miami, FL 33101 or by email to cocpubreq@miamidade.
By Florida law, the Clerk of Courts in each county is the official custodian of court records. Click here to access the Clerk's Online Services, including official records, civil/family/probate cases, criminal cases and traffic cases, or you may call the Clerk's 24-hour voice response system at (305) 275-1155.
Request a court hearing. You may plead not guilty and request a court hearing online, by visiting our Traffic Online System or by filling out the Request for Trial Form.
Steps to file a mechanics lien in Miami-Dade County Step 1: Get The Right Form & Meet Margin Requirements. Step 2: Calculating Your Miami-Dade County Filing Fees. Step 3: Serve the Mechanics Lien. Step 4: File your lien with the Miami-Dade County Clerk.
Now, all plea agreements are open to the public unless the prosecu- tor or another party makes a motion to seal them and the judge agrees.
Instead the courts seal plea agreements on a case-by-case basis under an order by the judge. In these districts, if the agreements aren't ordered to be sealed, they include any cooperation information and are open to the public and available on PACER, the federal online docketing system.