Search Maury County Police Records

Maury County Police Records are easiest to find when you stay with the county route in Columbia and use the jail search tools as a first step rather than the full answer. The sheriff office and jail share the same Lawson White Drive address, which keeps jail, records, and follow-up contact in one local path. If you need Maury County Police Records for a booking, a report, custody details, or a formal public-records request, start with the sheriff office, confirm which division holds the file, and then use Tennessee support tools only when the matter has clearly moved beyond county control.

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Maury County Police Records Facts

Columbia County Seat
386 Jail Capacity
50 Correctional Staff
7 Days Request Window

Maury County Police Records Search

Maury County Police Records often begin at 1300 Lawson White Drive, Columbia, TN 38401. The research ties both the sheriff office and the jail to that address and gives two local phone numbers that appear in the source set: 931-388-5151 and 931-380-5733. The jail phone is clearly identified as 931-380-5733, so that is the best choice for custody and booking questions. The broader sheriff office line remains useful when the request concerns a report, records routing, or the next step after an arrest in Maury County.

This county has a stronger local search path than places that rely only on phone calls. Research says the jail search shows a full name, mugshot, booking information, charges, bond, and court date. That means Maury County Police Records can start with a real local check before the user asks for a copy. Still, that public search is only the front layer. If you need the actual report, the full county file, or something older than the public jail screen shows, you still need the formal records-request route.

Visit the official county site at maurycounty-tn.gov for the local sheriff and jail path tied to Maury County Police Records.

Maury County Police Records sheriff office and jail reference

The image above anchors this page to the official Maury County source and supports the county-first route for booking checks, jail details, and records follow-up in Columbia.

Maury County Jail Records

The Maury County jail is described as a medium-to-maximum security facility with a capacity of 386 inmates, 50 correctional officers, and classified housing. Jail Administrator Debra Wagonschutz is named in the research, which helps confirm the facility-level records path. Those details matter because Maury County Police Records often overlap with jail status, booking information, bond questions, and court settings. A user may start with the public roster, but the full search often moves quickly into direct jail contact or the sheriff records office.

Mail to inmates is scanned into an electronic mail account, and books must be softcover and sent directly from a bookstore. Those details are not the main focus of a records page, but they help confirm the jail's operating structure and the correct facility address. Use the inmate's name and the jail address on Lawson White Drive when custody-related questions overlap with records searches. If your goal is a current status check, call the jail line first. If your goal is the actual document, move to the records-request process after confirming the file exists.

Maury County Police Records Requests

Formal Maury County Police Records requests run through Missy Wray in the records unit at the Maury County Sheriff's Office, 1300 Lawson White Drive, Columbia, TN 38401. The research lists a fax number of 931-380-1122 and says requests can be made in person, by mail, by email, or by fax. The county uses the Tennessee-resident rule, gives itself seven business days to respond, and provides forms on request. That creates a clear local path for users who need more than the public jail screen can provide.

Keep the request narrow. Include the name, event date, booking date if known, and the type of file you want. Say whether you are asking for a jail record, a report, or another law-enforcement file. Maury County Police Records are easier to retrieve when staff can match the request to one event or one person instead of searching a broad time period. That matters in a county where jail, records, and sheriff operations are closely tied at the same address.

Sheriff Office and Jail 1300 Lawson White Drive, Columbia, TN 38401
Jail Phone: 931-380-5733
Sheriff Office: 931-388-5151
Records Contact Missy Wray, Records, Maury County Sheriff's Office
Fax: 931-380-1122
Request Methods In person, mail, email, or fax
Request Rules Tennessee resident, forms on request, 7 business day response

If the office says the file is no longer local, ask where it moved next. That answer usually points to a court record, a crash report, or a state correctional record.

Maury County Police Records and Visits

Visitation details help confirm the jail structure even though they are not the main records goal. The research says inmates may receive one sixty-minute visit each week and that visitors must use an approved visitor form. It also notes that visits are limited by housing side and that people who were incarcerated there within the prior 90 days cannot visit. Those rules matter only as local context. They show that the jail runs on formal approvals and scheduled access, which matches the county's structured records process.

That same pattern appears in Maury County Police Records. A public search screen may help you identify the person, booking, and court date, but the full record still goes through a controlled office process. Separate your needs. Use the local search path and jail phone for current status. Use the records office when you need the actual county file.

Note: Jail visit rules can change by housing status, so call before relying on a prior schedule.

Maury County Police Records and TPRA

The state law behind Maury County Police Records is T.C.A. 10-7-503. That section of Tennessee law sets the public-access baseline while allowing agencies to withhold material that is protected by law. In practice, that means a county can provide inspection or copies of public material while still redacting parts of a file that cannot be released. The law supports the request, but it does not mean every page will be open in full.

The county-government explanation from CTAS is useful when you want a plain-language summary of Tennessee residency, local response timing, and public-records handling. Maury County has a stronger local search path than many counties in this batch, but the formal access rules still sit on the same Tennessee public-records foundation.

State Tools for Maury County

If the county gives only part of the answer, state tools help extend the search. VineLink is helpful for custody alerts and status tracking. If the case moves into a court setting, the next step is often Tennessee Courts. Those sources do not replace Maury County Police Records, but they help when the county route points you to a court event or when you need status support beyond the local jail roster.

For statewide agency records, start with the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation and, when needed, its open records request page. For broader criminal-history context, TORIS may help. If the file is really a crash report, use Purchase Tennessee Crash Reports. If the person later moves into state prison custody, TDOC FOIL is the better search path.

These tools work best after the local search begins. Maury County offers a real county route, so start there before moving outward.

Maury County Police Records Next Steps

The best Maury County Police Records workflow is direct. Start with the county search and jail phone to confirm custody, charges, bond, and court settings. Use the sheriff office and Missy Wray's records path when you need a formal county file. Keep the request focused, use the Lawson White Drive address, and rely on state tools only after the county points you there or the matter has clearly moved into court, TBI, crash, or state-custody systems.

Columbia is the county seat, but Maury County also includes a wider local footprint. That makes precise requests more useful. A name, a booking date, or a case-specific description usually gets better results than a broad request for everything.

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