Search Lake and Peninsula Borough Background Check
A Lake and Peninsula Borough background check draws on state-run tools because the borough has no central police force or county clerk for records work. The Alaska Department of Public Safety, the state court system, and the Alaska State Troopers handle most files. King Salmon hosts a trooper post that serves much of the borough. This page walks through how to find a Lake and Peninsula Borough background check, what each state portal shows, and which links to use for a name search or a court case lookup.
Lake and Peninsula Background Check Overview
How a Lake and Peninsula Background Check Works
The Lake and Peninsula Borough sits in southwest Alaska. It is one of the largest boroughs by land area in the country, but one of the smallest by population. There is no borough police force. The Alaska State Troopers run patrol from posts in King Salmon and Dillingham. For a Lake and Peninsula Borough background check, the state DPS Criminal Records and Identification Bureau holds the main file.
Any person may ask for a Lake and Peninsula background check on themselves or on someone else under AS 12.62.160. The state takes name-based and fingerprint-based requests. The fee for a name check is $20. The fee for a fingerprint check is $35. You can pay by check or money order to the State of Alaska.
Note: The borough is split by lakes, rivers, and Bristol Bay, so a paper request from a village like Port Heiden or Igiugig may take longer to mail than the actual DPS turnaround time.
DPS Background Check Portal
The fastest way to start a Lake and Peninsula Borough background check is through the DPS Self-Service portal. You enter your email and the state sends back a secure link. The form asks for your Social Security number and your Alaska ID number. You pay the fee online. The result comes by email. The Criminal Records Bureau is at 5700 E Tudor Road, Anchorage, AK 99507. The phone is 907-269-5767.
For a fingerprint check, you need an FD-258 print card. The state keeps a list of approved fingerprint sites. In the borough, a state trooper or a Village Public Safety Officer can often roll prints. The card and a $35 check go by mail to the bureau in Anchorage. The state runs the prints through the Alaska Public Safety Information Network and through the FBI national database.
The DPS file does not include juvenile cases, traffic tickets, or simple violations. Acquittal records drop off the public side after 60 days under AS 22.35.030. Sealed files do not show under AS 12.62.180.
Court Records in Lake and Peninsula
The Alaska Court System hosts CourtView, the public case search. The Naknek court point and the Dillingham Superior Court cover most of the case work for the Lake and Peninsula Borough. CourtView is free. You can search by name and pull a list of open files. The site shows the case number, the parties, and the case type.
To start a name search, open the Alaska Court System case search. To find a clerk address, use the Alaska Trial Courts page. The clerk can pull paper copies for $10 for the first page and $3 for each one after. Court staff research costs $30 per hour. Audio of a hearing is $20 per CD.
The court site warns that CourtView is not a full Lake and Peninsula Borough background check. Some files never go online. Confidential files like CINA, adoption, mental commitment, and minor settlement cases stay off the site under Administrative Rule 37.6. Always confirm a date of birth before you act on a name match.
Public Records in the Borough
The Public Record Center keeps a county-style index for the borough. The page lists state and federal sources for a Lake and Peninsula Borough background check. Visit the Lake and Peninsula records page for a starting list.

The page above links to court, vital, and inmate sources for the borough. From there you can move on to the state DPS portal or the CourtView search.
The Alaska Public Records Act, at AS 40.25.110 to 40.25.125, lays out access rights. State and local offices must reply to a public records request within 10 business days. Most pieces of a Lake and Peninsula background check are open. Vital files like birth and marriage records have long privacy holds. Some police reports are held back if they would hurt an open case.
Sex Offender and Inmate Lookups
The Alaska Sex Offender/Child Kidnapper Registry is public. Under AS 18.65.087, you can search by name, place, or zip. Each entry shows the photo, the address, the crime, and the status. Under AS 12.63.020, people with non-aggravated cases must register for 15 years. People with aggravated cases must register for life. The Alaska Supreme Court upheld the disclosure rule in Doe v. State, 189 P.3d 999 (Alaska 2008).
The Alaska Department of Corrections tracks state inmates. People from the Lake and Peninsula Borough who are in custody often go to the Anchorage Correctional Complex or to other state facilities. VINElink at (800) 247-9763 lets you find an inmate's status. The data shows the booking date, the charges, and the facility. This rounds out a Lake and Peninsula Borough background check when court files alone do not give the full picture.
Statutes and Care Background Checks
Alaska statutes shape what each Lake and Peninsula Borough background check shows. Under AS 12.62, misuse of criminal history data can lead to a criminal case. Under AS 12.62.180, a person can ask to seal an arrest record after an acquittal or full dismissal. Alaska does not have a general expungement law.
The Alaska Department of Health runs a separate path for care roles. Under AS 47.05.310 and 7 AAC 10.900, the Health Department checks names for foster parents, adoptive parents, and people who work with kids or vulnerable adults. The check looks at the nurse aide registry, the sex offender registry, the federal LEIE, court files, and FBI data. A person can ask for a variance or a redetermination if a barrier crime shows up.
Communities in Lake and Peninsula
Main communities in the borough include Port Heiden, Pilot Point, Egegik, Igiugig, Iliamna, Newhalen, Nondalton, Kokhanok, Levelock, and Chignik Lake. None of these meet the city page threshold. For a background check tied to one of these places, use the state DPS portal and the CourtView site. The Naknek and Dillingham clerks hold the case files for the borough.
Keep in mind that CourtView alone is not a full Lake and Peninsula Borough background check. The court site is free, but it leaves out arrest records that never led to a charge. It also drops acquittal data after 60 days under AS 22.35.030. Sealed files under AS 12.62.180 stay hidden from the public. The DPS name check at $20 or the print check at $35 fills those gaps. For the best picture, use the DPS report, the CourtView search, the sex offender list, and the DOC inmate lookup together.