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Cascade County Police Blotter

Great Falls and Cascade County police blotter coverage, arrest records, jail roster links, and warrant resources for one of north-central Montana's highest-interest public safety markets.

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Recent Activity Reports

50 total
Report

Daily Activity Report - Cascade

The agency responded to the following incidents: 03:33 – Vandalism at 700 BLK 4TH AVE NW 14:15 – Disturbing the Peace at 2600 BLK 8TH ST NE 14:47 – Assault at 2600 BLK 8TH ST NE 18:40 – Assault at 1200 BLK 9TH ST NW 19:29 – Vandalism at 3500 BLK 1ST AVE N 01:40 – Theft/Larceny at 3100 BLK 10TH AVE S // Historical Perspective: Public-order enforcement in Montana developed partly in reaction to the 1863-1864 Vigilante era, and the arrival of Territorial judges such as Hezekiah Hosmer helped move those disputes from vigilante action into formal courts.

03/25/26
Report

Daily Activity Report - Cascade

The agency responded to the following incidents: 15:02 – Assault at 1600 BLK 13TH AVE S 17:20 – Disturbing the Peace at 300 BLK 1ST AVE S 18:14 – Disturbing the Peace at 400 BLK 4TH AVE S 18:57 – Disturbing the Peace at 4100 BLK CENTRAL AVE 21:05 – DUI at 900 BLK 29TH ST S 01:13 – DUI at 2100 BLK 1ST AVE N // Historical Perspective: Montana's alcohol enforcement history is unusual: the state stepped back from Prohibition enforcement in 1926, and impaired driving was often treated as a 'folk crime' until stricter 1983 reforms reshaped DUI law.

03/24/26
Report

Daily Activity Report - Cascade

The agency responded to the following incidents: 01:00 – Vandalism at 600 BLK 5TH AVE N 02:48 – Vandalism at 3500 BLK 2ND AVE N 10:38 – Vehicle Break-In/Theft at 500 BLK 6TH AVE N 11:24 – Disturbing the Peace at 1600 BLK PALM CT 12:58 – Vehicle Break-In/Theft at 2800 BLK TERMINAL DR 13:38 – Vandalism at 600 BLK CENTRAL AVE 15:59 – Drugs/Alcohol Violation at 500 BLK 4TH AVE S 18:03 – Disturbing the Peace at 3200 BLK 11TH AVE S 19:14 – Disturbing the Peace at 2200 BLK 3RD AVE N 19:42 – Assault at 1100 BLK 7TH AVE S 20:58 – Motor Vehicle Theft at 1100 BLK 7TH AVE S 23:37 – Theft/Larceny at 3100 BLK 10TH AVE S // Historical Perspective: Montana's alcohol enforcement history is unusual: the state stepped back from Prohibition enforcement in 1926, and impaired driving was often treated as a 'folk crime' until stricter 1983 reforms reshaped DUI law.

03/23/26
Report

Daily Activity Report - Cascade

The agency responded to the following incidents: 17:58 – Assault at 3500 BLK 7TH ST NE

03/22/26
Report

Daily Activity Report - Cascade

The agency responded to the following incidents: 01:54 – DUI at 500 BLK CENTRAL AVE 13:00 – Theft/Larceny at 600 BLK 2ND AVE N 21:58 – Theft/Larceny at 3100 BLK 10TH AVE S 22:44 – Drugs/Alcohol Violation at 1300 BLK 20TH ST S // Historical Perspective: Montana's alcohol enforcement history is unusual: the state stepped back from Prohibition enforcement in 1926, and impaired driving was often treated as a 'folk crime' until stricter 1983 reforms reshaped DUI law.

03/21/26
Report

Daily Activity Report - Cascade

The agency responded to the following incidents: 08:05 – Vehicle Break-In/Theft at 2900 BLK 6TH AVE S 09:33 – Theft/Larceny at 1500 BLK 3RD AVE N 12:33 – Drugs/Alcohol Violation at 2800 BLK TERMINAL DR 14:00 – Assault at 3800 BLK 7TH ST NE 15:58 – Vandalism at 200 BLK 7TH AVE S 01:06 – Disturbing the Peace at 9TH AVE S / 7TH ST S // Historical Perspective: Montana's alcohol enforcement history is unusual: the state stepped back from Prohibition enforcement in 1926, and impaired driving was often treated as a 'folk crime' until stricter 1983 reforms reshaped DUI law.

03/20/26
Report

Daily Activity Report - Cascade

The agency responded to the following incidents: 09:31 – Drugs/Alcohol Violation at 2400 BLK 10TH AVE S 12:13 – Theft/Larceny at 2700 BLK EVERGREEN DR 14:18 – Disturbing the Peace at 700 BLK 5TH AVE NW // Historical Perspective: Montana's alcohol enforcement history is unusual: the state stepped back from Prohibition enforcement in 1926, and impaired driving was often treated as a 'folk crime' until stricter 1983 reforms reshaped DUI law.

03/19/26
Report

Daily Activity Report - Cascade

The agency responded to the following incidents: 09:00 – Vandalism at 1000 BLK 3RD AVE SW 11:50 – Theft/Larceny at 1200 BLK 10TH AVE S 15:59 – Burglary at 700 BLK SMELTER AVE NE 22:56 – Disturbing the Peace at 2100 BLK 21ST AVE S 00:53 – Disturbing the Peace at 2100 BLK 21ST AVE S // Historical Perspective: Public-order enforcement in Montana developed partly in reaction to the 1863-1864 Vigilante era, and the arrival of Territorial judges such as Hezekiah Hosmer helped move those disputes from vigilante action into formal courts.

03/18/26
Report

Daily Activity Report - Cascade

The agency responded to the following incidents: 16:14 – Drugs/Alcohol Violation at 1700 BLK 6TH AVE S 16:20 – Drugs/Alcohol Violation at 2700 BLK 7TH AVE N // Historical Perspective: Montana's alcohol enforcement history is unusual: the state stepped back from Prohibition enforcement in 1926, and impaired driving was often treated as a 'folk crime' until stricter 1983 reforms reshaped DUI law.

03/17/26
Report

Daily Activity Report - Cascade

The agency responded to the following incidents: 10:11 – Theft/Larceny at 1200 BLK 10TH AVE S 10:49 – Theft/Larceny at 1400 BLK 7TH AVE NW 11:05 – Disturbing the Peace at 2600 BLK 8TH ST NE 12:27 – Motor Vehicle Theft at 1100 BLK 1ST AVE S // Historical Perspective: Public-order enforcement in Montana developed partly in reaction to the 1863-1864 Vigilante era, and the arrival of Territorial judges such as Hezekiah Hosmer helped move those disputes from vigilante action into formal courts.

03/16/26
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About Cascade County Law Enforcement

Cascade County is home to Great Falls, Montana's third-largest city and the county seat. The county is served by the Cascade County Sheriff's Office and the Great Falls Police Department. Great Falls sits along the Missouri River and is a regional hub for north-central Montana. Malmstrom Air Force Base, located within the city, brings a substantial military population to the area. The Great Falls Municipal Court publishes an active warrant list online. Cascade County Detention Center maintains a public inmate roster with current bookings.

Cascade County captures a mix of county-level and Great Falls-specific search intent, so this page is built to serve both users looking for a county archive and users trying to find warrant, arrest, and jail information tied to Great Falls.

Because Cascade has both active warrant and detention links plus a growing report archive, it is one of the better candidates on the site for ranking across multiple practical query types instead of just a single blotter term.

High-intent searches this page serves

Cascade County police blotter Great Falls police blotter Cascade County arrests Cascade County jail roster Great Falls warrants

Cascade County Records Snapshot

Freshness

04/25/26

Latest indexed county report date visible on this page.

Methodology

Great Falls-centered coverage with official county links

Montana Blotter surfaces recent Cascade County reporting and connects it to the official Cascade detention roster and Great Falls warrant list so readers can move from summaries into the underlying public-record systems.

Source methods

CrimeMapping

Best next clicks

Arrests, warrants, jail roster, recent reports

Use the linked modules below to move deeper into the county record set.

Cities Covered In Cascade County

Recent Incident Records In Cascade County

These are the newest source-linked incidents currently surfaced for Cascade County. Use them to move into recent reports and individual record pages.

How to Find Arrest Records in Cascade County

Arrest records in Cascade County are public documents under Montana's public records laws. There are several ways to access them:

  1. 1 Montana Blotter (this site) — Free, AI-summarized daily activity reports from law enforcement agencies serving Cascade County. No account required.
  2. 2 Cascade County Jail Roster — The Cascade County Detention Center posts a live roster of current inmates.
  3. 3 Montana DOJ Criminal History — The Criminal History Online Public Records Search (CHOPRS) allows name-based searches of felony and misdemeanor charges statewide for a $20 fee.
  4. 4 Montana Courts PortalMontana's public court access portal provides case-level criminal records for district courts and limited jurisdiction courts statewide.

How to Check Active Warrants in Cascade County

Active arrest warrants and bench warrants in Cascade County are public records. You can search for them through the Montana Judicial Branch Public Access Portal — select "Warrants" under the defendant search drop-down. The Cascade County warrant list is also available directly from the county. You can also call the Cascade County Sheriff's Office at 406-454-6840 to inquire about active warrants.

Editorial Standards

Montana Blotter is designed to make public records and public meeting information easier to access. It is not a government office, and it does not replace official notice, clerk records, court files, or agency databases.

1. Primary Source Rule
We prefer direct links to official county, city, court, sheriff, police, and state judiciary pages. Where possible, each page should point readers back to the original public record, agenda, minutes page, or official document listing.

2. What We Standardize
Date and time formatting — location and body-name labeling — document labels such as agenda, packet, or minutes — searchable statewide filters and metadata.

3. What We Do Not Claim
We do not claim to be the official keeper of public records. We do not guarantee that a third-party government site is complete, current, or correctly maintained. We do not treat summaries or extracted text as a substitute for the official source file.

4. Update Cadence
Automated sources are checked on a recurring basis. If a source is stale, broken, or moved, the originating public body remains the authoritative reference until the source is repaired.

5. Provenance and Visibility
We aim to show where information came from, when it was last refreshed, and how users can verify it.

6. Redactions and Sensitive Material
We may review records for obvious sensitivity, legal restrictions, or redaction issues. The existence of a public record does not automatically mean every field or derivative presentation should be amplified without review.

7. Corrections
If a source link breaks, a meeting is mislabeled, a record is duplicated, or a page needs clarification, see the Corrections Policy for the reporting workflow.

8. Government and Clerk Communications
If you work for a Montana public body and need a source updated, corrected, or removed, contact us directly. We prefer exact URLs, dates, and a brief explanation of the change.

9. Contact
Montana Blotter — records@montanablotter.com

Read full standards →

Corrections Policy

We want corrections requests to be specific, easy to verify, and fast to act on. The more concrete the report, the faster it can be reviewed.

1. What To Report
Broken official source links — moved agenda or minutes pages — incorrect meeting date, body name, or location label — duplicate records or meetings — stale source pages — material factual errors in a summary or description.

2. What To Include
The exact Montana Blotter URL — the exact official source URL that should be used — a short description of what is wrong — if timing matters, the date and time the official source changed.

3. Where To Send It
Email records@montanablotter.com with subject line Correction Request or Source Update. If you represent a government office, say so in the message.

4. Review Standard
We review corrections against the official source when available. If a report cannot be verified, we may ask for a clarifying URL, screenshot, or exact document reference before changing the page.

5. Response Goal
Our goal is to review straightforward source and labeling issues within two business days. Complex disputes, legal issues, and record-sensitivity questions may take longer.

6. How Fixes Are Handled
Broken or moved source URLs are updated at the source-config level when possible. Mislabeled dates, titles, or locations are corrected in the public presentation. If a government source removes or replaces a document, the official source controls.

7. Limits
A correction request does not automatically guarantee removal. Montana Blotter may preserve accurate public-record references while updating labels, links, timestamps, or explanatory text.

Read full corrections policy →

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