Clark County DUI Records Lookup

Clark County DUI records are managed through the courthouse in Springfield, Ohio. The Clerk of Courts maintains all OVI case files for Common Pleas Court, and the Springfield Municipal Court handles most misdemeanor DUI cases in the county. You can search these records by name or case number to find specific cases. Clark County sits in west-central Ohio and has a busy court system that processes a large number of OVI cases each year. Public access to these records is guaranteed under Ohio law, and both online tools and in-person visits work for getting case information.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Clark County DUI Records Overview

Springfield County Seat
2nd District Court of Appeals
$0.05 Per Page Copy
OVI Ohio's DUI Term

Clark County Clerk of Courts

The Clark County Clerk of Courts handles all court records for Common Pleas, Appeals, Civil, Criminal, Domestic, Foreclosure, and Garnishment cases. The office is at 3130 East Main Street, Springfield, OH 45503. You can reach the clerk at 937-521-1680. This office keeps every felony OVI case file and provides public access to those records during business hours.

Staff at the clerk's office can pull up DUI case files when you give them a name, case number, or date range. The full case file includes the complaint, arrest report, chemical test results, plea documents, and the judge's sentencing order. Standard copies cost $0.05 per page. Certified copies are $1.00 per page. The Clark County official website provides links to all county offices and explains how to make public records requests.

Clark County official website for accessing DUI records

The Clark County website connects you to the clerk's office and other court departments where OVI records are stored and made available to the public.

You have a few ways to search for DUI records in Clark County. The statewide Ohio Courts Network lets you pull up basic case data from any Ohio court, including Clark County. You can search by name or case number. The system gives you enough to know if a case exists and what the current status is, though it may not show every document in the file.

For a complete look at any OVI case, going to the courthouse in Springfield is your best bet. Ask the clerk to pull the file you need. Bring the person's full name and any other details you have. Staff can search their system and find what you are looking for. You can review the file at the courthouse and order copies of pages you want to keep.

Clark County Common Pleas Court has two judges who handle felony cases. Judge Brian Driscoll can be reached at 937-521-1744, and Judge Douglas Rastatter at 937-521-1739. The court offers specialized docket programs for offenders with substance abuse issues, which can affect how an OVI case moves through the system. The jury coordinator is available at 937-521-1750 if you need info about trial schedules.

Note: Ohio uses the term OVI instead of DUI, but both refer to the same offense and the same court records in Clark County.

Springfield Municipal Court DUI Cases

The Springfield Municipal Court handles most misdemeanor OVI cases in Clark County. First, second, and third offenses within ten years are misdemeanors and go through this court. The court keeps records of all traffic citations and criminal misdemeanor cases, including every OVI charge filed in its jurisdiction.

DUI cases in Clark County follow Ohio Revised Code Section 4511.19, which makes it a crime to drive with a blood alcohol level of 0.08% or more. A first OVI means a minimum three-day jail term or a Driver Intervention Program, fines from $375 to $1,075, and a one to three year license suspension. Second offenses bring ten days in jail and fines up to $1,625. By the fourth offense in ten years, the case becomes a felony and moves up to Common Pleas Court. The Springfield Municipal Court also handles OVI-related programs and referrals for offenders.

DUI Appeals in Clark County

Clark County is part of the Second District Court of Appeals. This court hears appeals from Common Pleas Court decisions, including felony OVI convictions. If you want to appeal a DUI conviction from Clark County, you must file within 30 days of the final judgment.

Ohio's implied consent law under ORC Section 4511.191 means drivers have already agreed to a chemical test if stopped for OVI. Refuse the test and you face a one-year Administrative License Suspension. You can appeal that suspension under ORC Section 4511.197 within 30 days of your first court date. The Second District covers Champaign, Clark, Darke, Greene, Miami, and Montgomery counties, and its published opinions set precedent across the whole district.

Clark County DUI License Suspensions

Every OVI conviction in Clark County triggers a license suspension. The Ohio BMV tracks all suspensions on your driving record. Each OVI conviction adds six points. Hit 12 points in two years and the BMV suspends your license on top of whatever the court ordered.

Under ORC Section 4510.037, first-time OVI offenders in Clark County can ask for limited driving privileges after 15 days of hard suspension. The court may set hours, routes, and conditions. Repeat offenders and high-test cases must install an ignition interlock device. The Ohio Traffic Safety Office lists certified interlock providers. Reinstatement costs $475 through the BMV, plus you need SR-22 proof of insurance.

Are Clark County DUI Records Public

Yes. All court records in Ohio are public under Ohio Revised Code Section 149.43. Anyone can ask for OVI case files at the Clark County Clerk of Courts without being part of the case. The Ohio Attorney General oversees public records laws statewide.

Some parts of a DUI file may be redacted. Social security numbers and certain medical details get blacked out. Sealed records from expungement cases are not available. But the vast majority of OVI case documents in Clark County are open for anyone to see, including the complaint, test results, plea agreement, and sentencing order.

Cities in Clark County

Clark County includes Springfield, which has its own city page with more details on local DUI records and court resources.

Nearby Counties

Clark County borders several other Ohio counties. Each has its own court system for DUI cases. If you need records from a neighboring county, contact that county's clerk of courts.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results