Search Campbell County Police Records

Campbell County Police Records usually start with the sheriff office in Jacksboro, then branch into the county jail search, county clerk contacts, or state tools when the record trail goes farther. If you need to search a booking, request a report, or confirm which office holds the file, the local sheriff and county records contacts are the best first stop. Campbell County has a stronger official online path than many counties, so a careful search can stay on official pages from the start and avoid weak third-party copies.

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Campbell County Police Records Quick Facts

Jacksboro County Seat
39,842 Population
Robbie Goins Sheriff
498 Square Miles

Campbell County Police Records Search

Campbell County was founded in 1806, and Jacksboro remains the county seat. The county includes LaFollette, Jacksboro, Caryville, Jellico, and Fincastle, so a search can begin with a city event but still end at the county sheriff office. That local split matters. A city officer may write the report, but county custody, booking, and jail records still sit with the sheriff office. Keeping those layers straight is the fastest way to locate Campbell County Police Records without filing the same request twice.

The official county site at campbellcountytn.gov is the broad starting point for Campbell County contacts, while the sheriff page is the better direct path for law enforcement records. The sheriff and jail are both listed at 610 Main Street, Jacksboro, TN 37757, with mailing handled through P.O. Box 82. The main phone is (423) 562-7446, and the sheriff email listed in research is `sheriff@campbellcountytn.gov`.

See the sheriff page at campbellcountytn.gov/sheriff for the local office that anchors Campbell County Police Records.

Campbell County Police Records sheriff office page and county law enforcement contact

The sheriff page is the best local source for contact details, jail information, and the core office behind Campbell County Police Records.

Campbell County Jail Records

The strongest online search tool in Campbell County is the official ISOMS jail portal. That portal supports name searches, booking number searches, date ranges, and status filters. The research also says the results can show booking details, bond information, court dates, and housing assignments. That makes it a far better starting point than a weak third-party jail roster page.

The jail shares the same 610 Main Street address and phone number as the sheriff office, and the research describes it as a maximum-security facility with capacity for about 150 inmates. That gives you a useful local frame. If you are checking fresh custody status or trying to match a person to a booking record, the ISOMS path is the best first move. If the portal gives only part of the answer, then a direct call to the jail or sheriff office is the next step.

Open the official jail search at tnac.isoms.cloud:8001/portal/Jail when you need the live booking side of Campbell County Police Records.

Campbell County Police Records official ISOMS jail search portal

The ISOMS image points to the county's strongest search path for booking, bond, housing, and court-date details tied to Campbell County Police Records.

Campbell County Police Records Requests

When the live jail search is not enough, the county records process becomes the main route. The research says requests should be in writing and should include identification, enough detail to find the record, and the requestor's contact information. Requests can be made by mail, by email, or in person. The county may require proof of residency for certain records, and the county expects to respond within seven business days. That timeline is in line with normal Tennessee public records practice.

The county clerk contact in the research is Alene Baird, located at 590 Main Street, Suite A 21, P.O. Box 450, Jacksboro, TN 37757. The office phone is (423) 562-4985, the fax is (423) 566-3852, and the email listed is `alene.baird@campbellcountytn.gov`. That office can help direct a request when the record is county-held but not part of the live jail portal. For sheriff-side files, use the sheriff office first. For county administrative routing, the clerk contact helps keep the request on the right track.

Sheriff and Jail 610 Main Street, Jacksboro, TN 37757
P.O. Box 82, Jacksboro, TN 37757
Phone: (423) 562-7446
County Clerk Contact 590 Main Street, Suite A 21, Jacksboro, TN 37757
Phone: (423) 562-4985
Fax: (423) 566-3852
Request Methods Written request by mail, email, or in person with identifying details

A good request names the person, the date, the place, and the exact record type. Campbell County Police Records are easier to find when the request is narrow and tied to one event instead of a broad search across months or years.

Campbell County Police Records and TPRA

The public-access rule behind Campbell County Police Records is T.C.A. 10-7-503. That statute opens Tennessee public records unless another law makes part of the file confidential. In practical terms, that means a county office can release public portions of a record while still holding back protected details. Active investigations, juvenile material, and sensitive personal data are common reasons for limits or redactions.

The CTAS summary at ctas.tennessee.edu/eli/tennessee-public-records-statutes is useful when you want a plain-language explanation of how Tennessee public records rules work in county offices. That summary helps if a request comes back partly denied or delayed for review. It also helps explain why some Campbell County Police Records can be inspected or copied quickly, while others need more time for review before release.

The law matters, but the local search path still matters more. Start with the sheriff or clerk office, then use the law and summary pages when you need to understand a delay, a redaction, or the reason a record is partly closed.

Campbell County Police Records Fees

Campbell County lists a straightforward fee schedule in the research. Standard copies are $0.15 per page. Certified copies are $1 per document. Research time is $15 per hour, and mugshots cost $5. Those charges are not unusual, but they are a good reason to search the official jail portal first and narrow the request before asking staff to pull a longer file.

If the ISOMS search already gives you the booking number, bond amount, housing assignment, or court date, you may not need a paid copy right away. If you do need a report or a certified record, the fee schedule gives you a rough expectation before the county starts the work. That can save time and keep a Campbell County Police Records request focused on the exact file that matters.

State Tools for Campbell County Police Records

State tools help when the local county file is only one part of the story. The Tennessee courts site at tncourts.gov is the better next stop when a jail booking turns into a case and you need court follow-up. The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation home page at tn.gov/tbi.html gives you the main state agency entry point, and the TBI open records page at tn.gov/tbi/general-information/open-records-request.html is the official route for state-agency public records questions.

For broader criminal-history context, the TORIS system at tbibackgrounds.tbi.tn.gov/Toris/ can help when a person has records outside Campbell County. If the search shifts into state correctional custody, the Tennessee Department of Correction FOIL search at apps.tn.gov/foil/ is the next tool to use. Those tools do not replace Campbell County Police Records. They support them when the case moves outside the county jail or when a local search alone is not enough.

Use the county pages first. Then move to courts, TBI, or TDOC only when the record trail clearly goes beyond Campbell County.

Next Steps for Campbell County

The shortest Campbell County Police Records path is direct. Start with the sheriff page for the office contact. Move to the official ISOMS jail portal for live booking, bond, and housing details. Send a written county request if the online result is not enough. Then use the Tennessee courts, TBI, or TDOC tools only when the record trail expands beyond county custody. That order keeps the search clean and avoids third-party sites that add little value.

If a search stalls, tighten the request. Add the booking number, a better date range, or the exact event location. In a county this size, a precise request usually works better than a broad one.

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