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Arizona Officer Lookup — BenchRecon

Run the Arizona officer testifying against your client.

AZPOST peace-officer certification and employment-history records — agency-by-agency stints, separation reasons, and employment history, every entry cited to the underlying public record. Live free preview. $147 for the full citable brief with drafted Arizona Public Records Law records-demand letters.

AZPOST certification + employment historyAgency stint historySource appendix on every rowRecords demand roadmap

What the Officer Lookup covers for Arizona cases.

AZPOST certification + employment history

Statewide peace-officer certification and employment records maintained by the Arizona Peace Officer Standards and Training Board — agency stints with start and end dates and the separation reason recorded on each stint, public under the Arizona Public Records Law and published via the National Police Index (May 2023 snapshot).

Agency stint history

Every agency the officer has worked for in the certification record — including prior agencies the officer left before joining the one on your case — with the separation reason recorded on each stint. The published export carries no AZPOST decertification field; certification status must be confirmed with AZPOST directly, and the brief maps that demand path.

Records demand roadmap

The paid brief maps which record classes require a separate Arizona Public Records Law demand and to which custodian — AZPOST disciplinary case files, Phoenix/Tucson-metro internal-affairs and sheriff units, county Attorney Brady/Giglio lists — and includes a drafted request letter pre-filled with the officer's identifiers. AZPOST Integrity Bulletins are narrative board-discipline summaries for context, not a structured-data source.

Identity verification checklist

AZPOST rows match on name and agency — never a confirmed identity. Every match result carries a confidence level, and the brief flags same-name candidates so you verify identity before attaching any row to a motion.

Coverage boundary: Arizona peace-officer certification + employment history from the Arizona Peace Officer Standards and Training Board (AZPOST), public under the Arizona Public Records Law and published via the National Police Index. This is employment/certification history — it does NOT include local-agency internal-affairs complaints, AZPOST integrity-bulletin disciplinary case files, or prosecutor Brady/Giglio lists, which must be requested from the custodians named in the paid brief.

What this solves.

  • Public officer data is fragmented across opinion text, public-record portals, complaint datasets, and certification exports. The preview tool pulls the Arizona certification layer into one search — including prior agencies the officer left before joining the one on your case.
  • The paid brief includes a drafted, statute-cited records-request letter — citing the Arizona Public Records Law, A.R.S. § 39-121 et seq. — pre-filled with the officer's identifiers, plus the custodian-by-custodian roadmap for the AZPOST disciplinary case file, the local IA file, and the county Attorney Brady/Giglio list the certification dataset does not hold.
  • Every entry carries a citation to the underlying public record, with an identity-verification checklist before you rely on any row or attach it to a motion.

Full report — $147

The paid Officer Lookup brief.

One officer, one jurisdiction, one citable PDF and DOCX with a source appendix linking every row to its public-record origin. 7-day refund window.

  • Candidate Match Summary
  • Public-Record Event Rows
  • Records Demand Roadmap
  • Identity Verification Checklist
  • Drafted Records Request Letter
  • Source Appendix
  • Methods and Limits

Order the full Officer Lookup brief.

Enter the officer name and select Arizona in the jurisdiction dropdown (the form defaults to Chicago) to run the full report.

Order for Arizona — $147

Records reflect public complaint filings and certification-discipline entries. A complaint record is not a finding of misconduct. All data is drawn from the named public source. BenchRecon makes no finding regarding the conduct of any individual officer.