Wyoming criminal records come from two main sources: the state criminal history repository (maintained by the state police or equivalent agency) and individual county court systems. These are separate databases that may show different information.
What this page covers: Wyoming state-level criminal history searches, county court criminal case lookups, and sex offender registry searches. What it does not cover: Federal criminal cases (those require PACER) or arrest records that did not result in charges.
Where to start: For a broad criminal history check, start with the state repository. For specific case details (charges, dispositions, documents), go to the Clerk of District Court in the county where the case was filed. For sex offenders, use the state sex offender registry.
Common mistake: A state criminal history search and a county court search are not the same thing. The state repository compiles conviction data from across the state. County courts have the actual case files with full detail. You may need both.
Wyoming Criminal Records — Key Numbers (2026)
State-only check (State Identification Bureau): Returns arrests, dispositions and convictions reported to that one state's repository. It does not include arrests from other states or most federal cases. See the FBI's directory of state agencies: State Identification Bureau Listing.
Multi-state / federal check (FBI Identity History Summary): Returns records contributed by federal, state, local, and tribal agencies through the FBI's Interstate Identification Index (III). See FBI Identity History Summary FAQs and Interstate Identification Index (III).
What state repositories miss: The FBI's national survey of state criminal-history information systems documents known reporting gaps (missing dispositions, delayed updates, sealed/expunged handling). See BJS: Survey of State Criminal History Information Systems.
What Changed in 2026 — Wyoming Criminal Records
Wyoming Counties
All 23 Wyoming counties. Click any county for local court, sheriff, recorder and assessor links.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I run an official Wyoming background check?▼
Wyoming's official statewide criminal-history check is administered by the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation (DCI). Begin the request at wyomingdci.wyo.gov. Most state-level checks require submitting fingerprints (live-scan or ink) plus a processing fee, and the response covers convictions and certain non-conviction data permitted by Wyoming statute.
Are Wyoming criminal records public?▼
Most adult criminal-history information in Wyoming is considered public record, but access is restricted depending on the requester (self, employer, government agency) and the data type (arrest, conviction, sealed, juvenile). The Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation (DCI) explains who can request what at wyomingdci.wyo.gov. County-court records are also public and searchable through the trial-court system.
What's the difference between a state and an FBI background check in Wyoming?▼
A state check from the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation (DCI) (wyomingdci.wyo.gov) covers only criminal activity within Wyoming. An FBI Identity History Summary (fbi.gov) is the nationwide check covering federal records and contributing states. Employers and licensing boards often require both.
Can I get someone else's Wyoming criminal record?▼
Generally, no — only the record subject (with their own ID and signature) or a specifically authorized requester (such as a credentialed employer under the Fair Credit Reporting Act, a licensing board, or law enforcement) can pull a third-party criminal history from the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation (DCI). The Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation (DCI) documentation at wyomingdci.wyo.gov lists each authorized requester category.
How do I challenge or correct a Wyoming criminal record?▼
If you find an error on your Wyoming criminal history, the Wyoming Division of Criminal Investigation (DCI) offers a record-review and challenge process. Begin at wyomingdci.wyo.gov — typical steps include fingerprint verification, a written dispute, and supporting court documents (such as a dismissal or expungement order) for each contested entry.
