Access O'Fallon Police Blotter
O'Fallon police blotter records are handled by the O'Fallon Police Department, which serves one of the fastest-growing cities in the St. Louis metro area. With roughly 90,000 residents, O'Fallon sits in St. Charles County and has a CALEA-accredited police department. You can request police blotter records through the city's public records request portal, contact the records supervisor directly, or visit the department at 1019 Bryan Road. The city processes requests under Chapter 610 RSMo and responds within 3 business days for standard requests.
O'Fallon Quick Facts
O'Fallon Police Department
The O'Fallon Police Department is located at 1019 Bryan Road, O'Fallon, MO 63366. The main phone is 636-379-5555. The department earned CALEA accreditation on July 27, 2024, which means it meets national best practice standards for law enforcement. That accreditation covers how the department handles police blotter records, use of force reports, and community interactions.
The Records Supervisor is Jamie McCarrick. You can reach the records division directly at 636-379-5643 or by fax at 636-379-5697. Email requests go to jmccarrick@ofallonmo.gov. Written requests are required for police reports. You can submit them online through the city website or send them by email. Accident reports take 7 to 10 days to process. Incident reports from the O'Fallon police blotter are available upon request.
O'Fallon is a suburban city in the St. Louis metro. Don't confuse it with O'Fallon, Illinois, which is a different city in a different state. Missouri's O'Fallon sits in St. Charles County and all police blotter records come through the O'Fallon PD at 1019 Bryan Road.
O'Fallon Police Blotter Records Portal
The city runs a public records request portal that handles Sunshine Law requests. Under Chapter 610 RSMo, the city must respond within 3 business days. The City Clerk processes requests. Bess Bacher, the Mayor's Administrative Assistant, can be reached at 636-379-5535 for general questions about the request process.
Fees vary based on the type of request and the amount of staff time needed. Research time is charged and standard copy fees apply. Payment is required before the records are released. This portal is the formal way to get O'Fallon police blotter documents, whether you need a single incident report or a batch of records.
How to Request O'Fallon Police Blotter Records
You have a few options for getting O'Fallon police blotter records. Each one works for different situations.
For a single report, emailing the records supervisor at jmccarrick@ofallonmo.gov is the fastest route. Include the date, type of incident, and any case number you have. The records division will pull the file and let you know the cost. For accident reports, expect a 7 to 10 day wait. Other incident reports are generally available sooner.
For a formal Sunshine Law request, use the city's online portal. This creates a paper trail and ensures your request is tracked through the system. The 3 business day response clock starts when the city receives your request. If the records need more time, the city will notify you with an estimated completion date. O'Fallon police blotter records that are open under Missouri law will be provided. Closed records may require a notarized release or a court order.
In-person requests are accepted at the police department during business hours. Bring a valid photo ID. You can fill out a records request form on site and pay any fees when the records are ready. The department is at 1019 Bryan Road. Staff can help you identify which records you need if you are not sure what type of O'Fallon police blotter report to request. Having the date, location, and type of incident will speed up the process.
Missouri State Tools for O'Fallon Records
Several state-level systems can help with searching O'Fallon police blotter data beyond what the city provides. The Missouri Automated Criminal History Site at machs.mo.gov runs name-based criminal history searches across the state. You need a first name, last name, and date of birth or Social Security Number. Results come as a secure PDF.
Show Me Crime at showmecrime.mo.gov from the Missouri State Highway Patrol has crime dashboards you can filter by county. St. Charles County data includes O'Fallon. The MSHP portal also has online arrest reports from state troopers, missing person maps, and sex offender registry searches. Missouri Case Net at courts.mo.gov covers all state court records, including cases from the St. Charles County Circuit Court. You can track O'Fallon police blotter arrests that lead to state charges through Case Net for free.
The O'Fallon Police Department earned CALEA accreditation on July 27, 2024. This national certification sets standards for how the department handles records management, evidence preservation, and police blotter documentation. Records Supervisor Jamie McCarrick at 636-379-5643 oversees day-to-day records operations and can answer questions about specific O'Fallon police blotter requests.
St. Charles County Police Blotter
O'Fallon falls under St. Charles County, the fastest-growing county in Missouri with about 400,000 residents. The St. Charles County Sheriff's Department at 101 Sheriff Dierker Court in O'Fallon handles law enforcement for unincorporated areas. The sheriff's phone is (636) 949-3000. Arrest records from the sheriff's office are separate from O'Fallon PD records.
The St. Charles County Department of Corrections houses O'Fallon arrestees who are held at the county level. The facility at 301 N. Second Street, St. Charles, MO 63301 has a maximum capacity of 592 inmates. Director Daniel Keen oversees operations. The phone is 636-949-3003. In-person visits are 60 minutes, non-contact, every other week, though they may be suspended during renovations. Remote video visitation is available for a fee. VINELink at vinelink.com can help you check inmate status for people booked through O'Fallon police blotter arrests and held at the county facility.
Nearby Missouri Cities
These St. Charles County and St. Louis area cities maintain their own police blotter records: