San Joaquin County Sex Offender Records
San Joaquin County sex offenders register at the Sheriff's Office located at 7000 Michael Canlis Boulevard in French Camp. Call 209-468-4400 for registration information and current procedures. This Central Valley county tracks offenders through the sheriff's main facility. Most offenders update once per year within five days of their birthday. Transients come in every 30 days. Sexually violent predators report every 90 days. You can search for local offenders on the California Megan's Law website using a city name like Stockton or Lodi. Results include photos, physical descriptions, and conviction details. San Joaquin County has both urban areas and agricultural communities. The tier system affects how long each person must register under state law.
San Joaquin County Registration Data
Sheriff Office Registration
The San Joaquin County Sheriff handles sex offender registration at 7000 Michael Canlis Boulevard in French Camp. Call 209-468-4400 for current procedures and hours. The office processes registrations for people who live in unincorporated areas or cities that use the sheriff for this service. Staff are trained in state registration laws and county policies.
First-time registrants report within five working days after release from custody. That deadline is set by state law. Missing it is a crime. The initial registration includes providing your address, employment details, vehicle information, and internet identifiers. The deputy takes a photo and verifies your ID. All data goes into the California Sex and Arson Registry that feeds the Megan's Law website.
Annual updates happen near your birthday. You have five working days before or after the date. Bring updated information about any changes. New address, new job, new car, new email accounts. All must be reported. The deputy enters the updates and takes a new photo. No fees apply to registration in California. State law prohibits charging for this mandatory service.
Transients without permanent addresses register every 30 days. They report where they are staying. Sexually violent predators register every 90 days regardless of housing status. The sheriff conducts compliance checks throughout the county. Deputies visit addresses to confirm offenders live where they claim. If someone moves without updating, the sheriff issues a warrant. Registration violations are prosecuted as crimes.
California Megan's Law
You can search for San Joaquin County sex offenders at meganslaw.ca.gov. Enter a city name like Stockton, Lodi, or Manteca. Or type a street address. The map shows pins for each offender near that location. Click a pin to see the profile. It includes a photo, physical description, conviction information, and registration tier.
Most offenders have full addresses posted. Some only show a zip code. A few are marked undisclosed per court order. The law decides who gets listed and how much detail appears. Not every registered sex offender shows up on the public site. Some are excluded based on the type of crime or their age when convicted. But the most serious cases usually appear.
San Joaquin County has cities and rural farmland. Offenders live throughout the county. The Megan's Law site covers all locations. You can search the whole county or focus on one city. The site also has special search options for schools and parks. It draws a radius around those places and lists offenders within that distance.
City Police Registration
Stockton Police Department has its own registration unit at 425 North El Dorado Street. Call 209-937-8323 for information. Hours are Monday through Thursday. Stockton residents register with the police department rather than the county sheriff. Other cities in San Joaquin County may use the sheriff or have their own police units. When in doubt, call the local police department and ask.
If you live in an unincorporated area or a city without its own registration unit, use the sheriff's office in French Camp. The staff can tell you which agency handles registration for your specific address.
State DOJ Forms
The California Department of Justice runs the statewide sex offender registry. Visit oag.ca.gov/sex-offender-reg for policy information and forms. Offenders can download the Application for Exclusion from Internet Disclosure if they qualify. The DOJ reviews requests and issues decisions. Processing takes 30 to 90 days or longer depending on case volume.
Other forms include the Internet Identifier Registration Form for reporting new email or social media accounts. There is also a DOJ Online College Course Registration Form for offenders taking online classes. The DOJ publishes FAQs about Senate Bill 384, which created the tiered registration system in 2021.
Tier One offenders register for ten years. After that, they can petition the court to end their registration requirement. Tier Two offenders register for twenty years before they can petition. Tier Three offenders register for life with no option to petition unless they receive a pardon. The court decides whether to grant relief based on the facts of each case.
CDCR Inmate Search
The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation operates CIRIS at ciris.mt.cdcr.ca.gov. This tool lets you look up someone in state prison. Enter a name or CDCR number. The system shows current custody status, location, admission date, and parole hearing dates. This helps if you want to know when someone will be released.
Once released, they have five working days to register with the local sheriff or police. CDCR also supervises sex offender parolees with GPS devices. All parolees wear ankle monitors. The Sex Offender Management Program combines supervision, treatment, and electronic tracking. Parole agents get alerts if someone enters a restricted area like a school or park.
National Registry
The U.S. Department of Justice maintains a national search tool at nsopw.gov. This database covers all 50 states plus U.S. territories. Use it to check if someone registered in another state before moving to California. The national registry does not replace the California Megan's Law site but adds another layer of information.
Offenders who move between states must register in each new location. The national tool helps track these movements. If you are researching someone with a multi-state history, start here. Then check the California site for current local data in San Joaquin County.
Registration Statutes
Penal Code Section 290 requires sex offender registration. This law lists crimes that trigger the duty to register. Rape, lewd acts with minors, sexual battery, kidnapping for sexual purposes, indecent exposure, and possession of child pornography are all included. Anyone convicted of these offenses must register.
The three-tier system took effect on January 1, 2021. Senate Bill 384 created this structure. Lower-level offenses get Tier One with ten years of registration. Mid-level offenses get Tier Two with twenty years. The most serious crimes get Tier Three with lifetime registration.
Penal Code Section 290.46 requires the DOJ to publish sex offender information online. This statute creates the legal basis for the Megan's Law website. It also sets rules for what data can be disclosed. Some offenders are excluded from the public site even though they register with local law enforcement.
Update rules come from Penal Code Section 290.012. Most offenders update annually within five working days of their birthday. Sexually violent predators update every 90 days. Transients update every 30 days. Failing to update on time is a criminal offense. Penalties include jail time and fines.
Cities in San Joaquin County
San Joaquin County includes the city of Stockton with over 100,000 residents. Other cities include Lodi, Tracy, Manteca, and Ripon. Stockton has its own police department registration unit. Other cities may use the county sheriff. Check with your local police department to confirm which agency handles registration in your city.
Note: Only cities with populations over 100,000 have dedicated pages on this site.
Nearby Counties
San Joaquin County borders several other counties. To the west is Contra Costa County and Alameda County. To the north is Sacramento County. To the east is Calaveras County and Amador County. To the south is Stanislaus County. Each county has its own registration system.