Disclaimer
This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a qualified attorney for guidance on your specific situation.
Detailed Answer
If you discover incorrect facts in a Nebraska law enforcement report, you can ask the agency to amend it under the Nebraska Public Records Act. Follow these steps:
- Obtain and review the report. Request a certified copy of the police report from the agency’s records division. Check every detail—names, dates, descriptions, location, and incident narrative.
- Gather supporting evidence. Collect documents, photographs, videos, witness statements, or any records that prove the entry is incorrect.
- Draft a written amendment request.
- Address it to the agency’s records custodian.
- Identify the report by date, report number, and officer name.
- Specify each inaccuracy and explain why it is wrong.
- Attach copies of your supporting evidence.
- Request a correction or annotation in writing.
- Cite the correction statute. Reference Neb. Rev. Stat. § 84-712.05 (correction of law enforcement records) to bolster your request.
- Send your request. Deliver by certified mail or hand-deliver with a signed receipt. Keep proof of delivery and copies of all documents.
- Wait for the agency’s response. Under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 84-712.05, the agency must respond within a reasonable time, typically 30 days.
- Review the outcome. If the agency corrects or annotates the report, obtain a new certified copy. If the agency denies your request in whole or in part, move to the next step.
- File a court petition. Within 30 days of denial, you may file a petition in the county district court to compel correction under Neb. Rev. Stat. § 84-712.05. You may seek reimbursement for court costs if you prevail.
Throughout this process, maintain timelines and document all communications. Clear, factual evidence increases your chance of a successful amendment.
Helpful Hints
- Use clear, concise language in your written request.
- Keep organized copies of every letter, email, and proof of delivery.
- Follow up politely but persistently if the agency misses deadlines.
- Ask for a meeting with a records supervisor if the first request is denied.
- Consider retaining a local attorney if you face complex factual disputes or litigation.
- Check the agency’s public records policy—some departments post forms online.
- Stay informed about Nebraska’s Open Records statutes at the Nebraska Legislature website.