Green Bay Municipal Court Docket

Green Bay Court Docket searches work best when you separate city ordinance cases from county circuit matters. The municipal court handles city citations, traffic and non-traffic ordinance violations, and the city record database gives you a way to check certain public records from 2004 forward. That makes the city court useful when you need to know what the citation says, what the plea options are, or where the next hearing goes. If the case becomes a county court matter, Brown County steps in. The first search still starts in Green Bay because that is where the city record and the payment path live.

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Green Bay Court Docket Overview

The Green Bay Municipal Court is at 330 S Jefferson Street, Green Bay, WI 54301. The phone number is (920) 448-3131, the fax number is 920-448-3135, and the public email is gbcourt@greenbaywi.gov. Court hours run Monday through Thursday from 7:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. and Friday from 7:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Court times are also set by day, which is why the notice or citation matters when you are planning a visit. Green Bay Municipal Court represents the judicial branch for the city and handles citations from the police, fire, inspection, and public works departments.

Green Bay Court Docket records are mostly ordinance violations. The city database covers public records from January 1, 2004 to the present and is updated weekly on Thursdays. That makes it useful for checking citation IDs, violation dates, names, birth dates, and status. The city also notes that convictions in municipal court are civil ordinance violations, not criminal convictions. That difference matters when you are trying to understand what kind of record you are looking at and where it should go next if you need a county file or an appeal.

The municipal court also handles both traffic and non-traffic ordinance work, so the record can be about parking, a citation, or a city code issue. Once you know that, the rest of the search becomes much more direct.

Searching Green Bay Court Docket

The court procedures page explains the plea path clearly. At the first appearance, a defendant can plead guilty, no contest, or not guilty. A not guilty plea can be made in writing before the court date, and that plea sends the case to a pretrial conference with the city prosecutor. If the charge is an OWI citation that qualifies for a jury request, the request has to be made in writing within ten days of the initial appearance and must include the required payment and deposit. That is why Green Bay Court Docket searches are often tied to the hearing calendar as much as the case name.

The parking citation process is a separate but connected track. Parking tickets can be paid at City Hall, through the mail, or by dropping payment in the City Hall dropbox. If a ticket is contested, the request has to be filed within thirty days and the person receives a date to appear in Municipal Court. The online database and the pay-a-citation pages work together here, because the docket tells you the violation and the payment page tells you how to clear it.

If the Green Bay case is already on the database, the online record search can save time because it points you to the citation and the case status before you contact the office. If the matter is old, the database still starts at 2004, which makes it a useful check even when the paper notice has gone missing.

Green Bay Image Guide

The city court page at greenbaywi.gov/497/Municipal-Court gives Green Bay Court Docket users the main office, hours, and case coverage in one place.

Green Bay Court Docket main municipal court page

That page is helpful when you need the basic court contact before you move to a citation or payment question.

The citation payment page at greenbaywi.gov/787/Pay-a-Citation is the next stop for Green Bay Court Docket users who want to avoid late fees or vehicle registration issues.

Green Bay Court Docket citation payment page

That image shows how the city routes citation balances into a payment workflow before the case grows into a bigger problem.

The online records database at rfs.greenbaywi.gov/MuniCourtWeb/default.aspx is the most direct Green Bay Court Docket image for people who want to check public records from 2004 onward.

Green Bay Court Docket online records database

It is the clearest public sign that the city maintains searchable municipal court records.

Brown County Records

If your Green Bay matter leaves municipal court, Brown County takes over the circuit record. The Brown County Clerk of Circuit Court page at browncountywi.gov/departments/clerk-of-circuit-court explains where the county court records are maintained and how the office manages the civil, criminal, family, small claims, juvenile, traffic, and paternity side of the docket. The Brown County circuit court records and forms page at browncountywi.gov/departments/clerk-of-circuit-court/general-information/wi-circuit-court-records-forms also points users back to WCCA for circuit access.

That county layer is important because Green Bay municipal records do not replace Brown County circuit records. They sit next to each other in the same legal geography, but they are not the same file. If the city case is appealed, if the issue becomes a circuit filing, or if you need a broader Wisconsin court record, Brown County and WCCA are the right follow-up tools. Green Bay Court Docket searches work best when you know which side of that line your case belongs on.

Brown County also offers online payment options for circuit costs, fines, and fees, which gives you a county route when the city case is no longer the only thing on the docket.

Green Bay Court Docket Requests

Green Bay Court Docket requests are simple when you keep the citation ID, violation date, and name close at hand. The online database uses those kinds of fields, and the payment pages let you move straight from record to resolution. If you need a copy, the city court can process payment by mail or at the counter, and the online payment portal can be used when the citation has already been filed. That is why the city keeps the search, payment, and hearing workflow so closely connected.

For written challenges, the city wants the not guilty plea before the appearance date, and parking contest forms have their own deadline. Those rules mean the docket is not just a passive record. It is the thing that sets the next move. If you miss a deadline, the city can forward unpaid parking citations to the state for registration suspension, so the record matters even when the fine looks small.

When you need the quickest route, start with the Green Bay database, check the citation page, and then use Brown County only if the matter becomes a circuit record. That keeps the Green Bay Court Docket search focused on the correct court.

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