Cuyahoga Falls People Search

A Cuyahoga Falls people search runs through Summit County public records. Cuyahoga Falls is directly north of Akron with about 50,000 residents. Court case records, property ownership data, the county jail roster, voter registration rolls, and vital records are all available through county offices and the city's own courts. This page covers where to search for people in Cuyahoga Falls and the Ohio statutes that give you the right to access these records.

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Cuyahoga Falls Quick Facts

~50,000Population
SummitCounty
330Area Code
9th DistrictCourt of Appeals

Court Records for Cuyahoga Falls People Search

The Cuyahoga Falls Police Department processes all requests for accident and incident records through the Records Division. Requests can be made online or by phone. Once a report is pulled, it can be emailed directly or picked up at the police department. A local record check is available with a release form for personally associated records. The form must be filled out in full and submitted to the records clerk. For a complete arrest and conviction record, the department directs you to contact Ohio BCI.

The Cuyahoga Falls Mayor's Court provides a local venue for traffic and misdemeanor cases. The court is now open for in-person hearings. The clerk's office is open 9 AM to 4 PM. A secure 24-hour drop box sits in the police department lobby. Cash, check, and money order are accepted for drop box payments. Traffic and criminal tickets can be paid by waiver using the drop box, online by 5 PM on the court date, or by mail.

The Cuyahoga Falls online docket search provides access to felony and misdemeanor records from 1992 to the present. Records include date of birth information. The Summit County Clerk of Courts maintains Common Pleas records for felonies, major civil cases, and domestic relations. Both court systems operate under ORC 149.43.

The Cuyahoga Falls online docket search is a primary tool for a people search through local case records.

Cuyahoga Falls people search Summit County board of elections

The Summit County Board of Elections page provides voter registration lookup for Cuyahoga Falls residents.

The Summit County Sheriff's Office provides inmate information through the corrections division. The jail roster shows who is currently held, their charges, and booking details. Contact the office for specific inmate status. For state-level records, the ODRC Offender Search covers state prison inmates. The eSORN registry tracks sex offenders. The Bureau of Criminal Investigation runs formal background checks.

Note: Parking tickets in Cuyahoga Falls cannot be paid online; they must be paid at the court or through the drop box.

Property and Voter Records in Cuyahoga Falls

The Summit County Fiscal Office has an online property records database accessible around the clock. Search by owner name, address, parcel number, or legal description. Property record cards show ownership, characteristics, valuation history, tax data, and transfer history. The county has 260,056 total parcels. Deed copies cost $4 plus $1 for certification. Deeds, mortgages, liens, and easements are recorded through the Fiscal Office at 175 S. Main Street in Akron. Property values are set every six years with updates every three.

The Summit County Board of Elections handles voter registration. The Ohio Secretary of State voter portal searches across all 88 counties. Records include name, address, birth date, and precinct under ORC 3503.15.

The Summit County Probate Court at 209 South High Street in Akron maintains marriage records, estate cases, and guardianships. Marriage records from 1840 to 1980 are indexed at Ancestry.com. For statewide vital records, the Ohio Department of Health has birth records from 1908 and death records from 1971 at $21.50 per search under ORC 3705.24.

Public Records Law for Cuyahoga Falls

Ohio law under ORC 149.43 makes public records accessible to everyone. You do not need to give your name or reason. Public offices must respond in a reasonable time. If a record contains exempt information, the office redacts those parts and releases the rest. Wrongful denial can result in $100 per business day in damages, up to $1,000. The Attorney General's Sunshine Laws page offers free mediation for disputes. Public officials must complete open records training at least once per term. These rules apply to every office in Cuyahoga Falls and Summit County. For a thorough Cuyahoga Falls people search, combine local court records from the Mayor's Court and the online docket search with county-level records from the Summit County Clerk of Courts and Fiscal Office. Add voter registration data and vital records from the probate court. Then layer in state databases like the ODRC Offender Search, the eSORN sex offender registry, and BCI background checks. Each source adds a different piece of the picture. The online docket search for Cuyahoga Falls includes records going back to 1992 for felonies and misdemeanors, which gives you a deep history to work with.

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Nearby Cities

These cities are near Cuyahoga Falls in Summit County.