Find Bledsoe County Police Records

Bledsoe County Police Records are easiest to handle when you know which office holds the file. A county arrest record, a jail entry, and a state prison record are not the same thing, and that difference matters in Pikeville. If you need to search for a booking, ask for a report, or get a copy of a record, start with the sheriff office and the county government contact points. Then move to state tools only when the search shifts into the Bledsoe County Correctional Complex or another Tennessee system. This page keeps the path plain, so you can get the right record without bouncing between offices.

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Bledsoe County Police Records Quick Facts

Pikeville County Seat
1807 Founded
James Morris Sheriff
407 Square Miles

Bledsoe County Police Records Search

Bledsoe County was founded in 1807, and Pikeville serves as the county seat. The county population is about 14,913, which keeps the record trail smaller than in Tennessee's largest counties, but it still helps to ask for the exact file. The sheriff is James Morris. The sheriff office is at 130 Frazier Street in Pikeville, and the county government office is at 3150 Main Street. Those are the two local places that matter most when you are trying to locate Bledsoe County Police Records and keep the search tied to the source.

The county government homepage at bledsoecountytn.gov is the best official starting point when you need county records help or a routing point for the sheriff office. Bledsoe County does not have a county-run inmate portal in the research, so direct contact still matters. That means a phone call, a written request, or a clear email can be more useful than searching a copycat roster site that may be out of date.

Use the county office first when the record was created by local law enforcement. If the matter later moved into state custody, the search path changes. That split is the key to Bledsoe County Police Records, because the county jail side and the state prison side do not share the same database.

Bledsoe County Police Records Requests

The request process in Bledsoe County is simple but strict. The county asks for a written request, a clear description of the record, and contact information so staff can reach you if the file needs a clarification. The county research also says to allow up to seven business days for a response and to pay any applicable fees. That is normal for a small county office, especially when the request needs a manual search or a copy pulled from paper files.

For the sheriff office, the contact details are straightforward. The office address is 130 Frazier Street, Pikeville, TN 37367. The mailing address is P.O. Box 246, Pikeville, TN 37367. The phone number is (423) 447-2197, and the email is sheriff@bledsoecountytn.gov. If you are sending a written request for Bledsoe County Police Records, include the record type, the date or date range, the names involved, and the incident location. Short and specific requests are easier to process than broad ones.

Sheriff Office 130 Frazier Street, Pikeville, TN 37367
Phone: (423) 447-2197
Email: sheriff@bledsoecountytn.gov
Mailing Address P.O. Box 246, Pikeville, TN 37367
County Government 3150 Main Street, Pikeville, TN 37367
Phone: (423) 447-6855

Good request detail helps in a county this size. If you already have a case number, include it. If you do not, give the date, the place, and the people involved. That keeps Bledsoe County Police Records searches from turning into a guess.

  • Full name of the person involved
  • Incident date or date range
  • Location of the event
  • Case number if known
  • Type of record you need

County Jail and State Prison Records

Bledsoe County does not have an official county-run inmate portal in the research, so the sheriff office remains the main local contact for jail and arrest questions. That is important because third-party roster sites exist, but they are not the cleanest source for a county record search. If you need a current jail answer, a direct call to the sheriff office is better than relying on a low-quality mirror.

The prison side is different. The Bledsoe County Correctional Complex at 1045 Horsehead Road in Pikeville is a Tennessee Department of Correction facility, not a county jail. The phone number is (423) 881-3251. If your search has reached that facility, you are no longer dealing with a local jail record. You are dealing with a state prison record, and the TDOC FOIL path is the better route for inmate information.

The TDOC FOIL page at tn.gov/correction/agency-services/foil.html is the clean state path when your search moves from county custody to a state prison record. The FOIL search itself is available at apps.tn.gov/foil/. That distinction matters because Bledsoe County Police Records cover county law enforcement, while TDOC FOIL covers state offender information.

The prison image below points to the state search path and helps keep the county jail side separate from the correctional complex side.

Bledsoe County Police Records related TDOC FOIL inmate search page

That state tool is useful when a Bledsoe County search needs prison information, release history, or another TDOC record instead of a county jail file.

TPRA and Bledsoe County Police Records

The Tennessee Public Records Act is the legal base for county access. The main access rule is in T.C.A. 10-7-503, which says public records are open unless another law makes them confidential. For Bledsoe County Police Records, that means a valid request can reach public files that exist at the time of the request. It does not mean every line in every report must be released.

The CTAS summary at https://www.ctas.tennessee.edu/eli/tennessee-public-records-statutes is a helpful plain-language guide when you want to understand how TPRA rules work in a local office. It is useful when a county record is partly open and partly redacted, or when the office needs to explain why a record takes time. That kind of review is normal. It does not mean the record is lost. It means the office is checking what can be released now.

Use the statute and the summary together when you need the legal frame behind a Bledsoe County request. That keeps the search grounded in the law that actually controls county access.

The public records law image below is a quick reminder that state law shapes how Bledsoe County Police Records are handled.

Bledsoe County Police Records TPRA and public records law reference

The image points to the state law side of the search and helps explain why some county records are open while others need review first.

Bledsoe County Police Records Fees

Bledsoe County lists a simple fee schedule for public records work. Standard copies are $0.15 per page. Certified copies are $1 per document. Research time is $15 per hour. Mugshot prints are $5 each. Those numbers matter because they show what the county may charge when a request needs staff time, page copies, or a certified record for use elsewhere.

Standard Copies $0.15 per page
Certified Copies $1.00 per document
Research Time $15.00 per hour
Mugshot Prints $5.00 each

If you only need a basic answer, ask for that first. A narrow request can keep the cost low and the turnaround short. If you need a certified copy or a larger search, the fee schedule tells you what to expect before the office starts the work. That is especially helpful in a county where the sheriff office still handles many Bledsoe County Police Records directly and may need to pull the file by hand.

State Tools for Bledsoe County Police Records

State tools can fill gaps when the local office only has part of the answer. The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation home page at tn.gov/tbi.html is the broad state starting point. The TBI open records page at tn.gov/tbi/general-information/open-records-request.html gives you another route if the search needs a state agency request. The TORIS system at tbibackgrounds.tbi.tn.gov/Toris/ supports statewide criminal-history searches, which can help when a person moved beyond the county file.

The Tennessee courts site at tncourts.gov is the best follow-up tool when a Bledsoe County arrest becomes a court case. A police record shows the event. A court record shows what happened after it. Used together, they give you a cleaner timeline than any single office can provide. That is why the county search usually works best when it starts local and widens only if needed.

If you are searching for a report, begin with the sheriff office. If you are searching for prison custody, use TDOC FOIL. If you need court follow-up, use the courts site. That order keeps Bledsoe County Police Records in the right lane and saves time on repeat requests.

Next Steps in Bledsoe County

The cleanest Bledsoe County Police Records search is simple. Start with the sheriff office for county law enforcement records. Move to county government if you need routing help or a public records contact. Use TDOC FOIL only when the case shifts into the state prison system. Then use the courts or TBI tools if you need a broader check on the case trail. That order keeps the search practical and gives you the best chance of getting the right file the first time.

If the first request does not answer the whole question, tighten it. Add the date, the place, the person, or the case number. A smaller request is often a better one.

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