Search Meigs County Police Records

Meigs County Police Records are handled through a direct local workflow in Decatur, with the sheriff office, jail, and county request coordinator all playing clear roles. This is not a county where a public portal does all the work for you. The research points to phone calls, written requests, warrant inquiries through a named contact, and Tennessee follow-up tools when the record trail moves beyond county control. This page keeps Meigs County Police Records tied to that real local process so you can start with the right office instead of relying on thin outside jail listings.

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Meigs County Police Records Quick Facts

Decatur County Seat
410 River Road
60 Jail Capacity
7 Days TPRA Response

Meigs County Police Records Search

The Meigs County Sheriff's Office is at 410 River Road, Decatur, TN 37322. The sheriff phone in the research is 423-334-5268, and the jail uses 423-334-3163. Sheriff Jackie Melton, Chief Deputy Brian Malone, and Jail Administrator Russell Grissom are all named in the source set, which gives this county a clear local structure. Meigs County Police Records often begin with one of those local points of contact, whether you need a jail record, a warrant-related question, or a broader county request.

The research also says warrant inquiries can be directed through the warrants division by phone, with Cathy Howard named as the contact and a requirement to provide a name and date of birth. That is a useful county-specific detail because it shows Meigs handles warrant questions through an actual office path rather than a generic web search. Meigs County Police Records are easier to find when you use those local details instead of treating every question like an online roster lookup.

The county image available in the workspace is tied to the Meigs County sheriff website and can be used as a local visual reference.

Meigs County Police Records sheriff office reference image

The image supports the page, but the real search path still runs through the sheriff office, jail, and county request coordinator in Decatur.

Meigs County Police Records Requests

Public-records requests in Meigs County go through Meigs County Government at 17214 State Highway 58 North, Decatur, TN 37322. The county phone in the research is 423-334-5850, and the methods listed are in person or by mail. Tennessee residency is required, and the county follows the normal seven-business-day response rule. That means a formal Meigs County Police Records request should be written, specific, and sent to the county with enough detail to match one event or one person.

A useful request usually includes the person's name, the date, the type of record, and any booking or warrant detail already confirmed through the sheriff office or jail. If you only need a quick custody or warrant status check, call first. If you need the actual document, use the written route. Meigs County Police Records are easier to locate when the county does not have to guess what file you mean.

Sheriff Office 410 River Road, Decatur, TN 37322
Phone: 423-334-5268
Jail 410 River Road, Decatur, TN 37322
Phone: 423-334-3163
County Request Coordinator 17214 State Highway 58 N., Decatur, TN 37322
Phone: 423-334-5850

If the local office says the file moved beyond county control, ask where it went next before broadening the search.

Meigs County Jail Records

The Meigs County Jail is described as a medium-to-maximum security facility with capacity for 60 inmates across four cell blocks, three for men and one for women. The research says inmates are booked and classified by charges. Those details matter because jail files, booking questions, and housing-related records all point back to a relatively small local facility. In a county this size, a narrow request is even more useful because the jail path is direct and the number of possible records is more limited than in larger counties.

The inmate mail format in the research is simple: inmate name, Meigs County Jail, 410 River Road, Decatur, TN 37322. That is not a records request on its own, but it confirms the right facility and reinforces that the sheriff office and jail operate from the same basic local address path. If your search begins as a jail question, start there. If it turns into a records request, move to the county-government route with the details you already gathered.

Meigs County Police Records and Warrants

Warrant access in Meigs County is more specific than in many counties because the research identifies a local warrants contact and a simple intake rule: provide a name and date of birth. That does not turn the county into a self-service warrant portal, but it does give you a cleaner local route than many thin-source counties. Meigs County Police Records tied to active warrants are still best handled by direct county contact rather than by outside arrest websites.

If your concern is custody tracking rather than a document copy, VINELink is the strongest support tool in the research set. It can help with status monitoring, but it is not a replacement for Meigs County Police Records held by the sheriff office, jail, or county government.

Meigs County Police Records and Tennessee Law

The state access rule behind Meigs County Police Records is T.C.A. 10-7-503. That law says public records are open unless another law protects part of the file. In practice, that means the county can permit inspection, charge standard copy fees, and still withhold material that Tennessee law shields from release. That is why a request may return a full copy, a redacted copy, or a request for more identifying detail before the county can release the file.

The CTAS summary at CTAS explains those county-government rules in plainer terms. It is useful when the county response refers to inspection, copying, residency, or exemptions. Meigs County Police Records remain local files first, but the statute and CTAS summary explain the rules behind the county answer.

State Tools for Meigs County Police Records

State tools matter when the local offices give only part of the answer. If the matter moves into court, Tennessee Courts is the next directory to use. If the question expands into statewide criminal history, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation site at tn.gov/tbi.html, the TORIS system at tbibackgrounds.tbi.tn.gov/Toris/, and the TBI open-records page are the stronger follow-up sources.

If the file is really a crash report, the proper route is apps.tn.gov/purchasetncrash/. If the person later moves into state correctional custody, the TDOC FOIL system at apps.tn.gov/foil/ becomes the better search path. Those tools support Meigs County Police Records, but they do not replace the local county workflow.

Meigs County Police Records Access Notes

Meigs County is one of the smaller counties in this project, with a county seat in Decatur and a population just above eleven thousand in the research. That smaller scale changes the records process. The local office path is clearer, the jail is smaller, and the value of a narrow request is even higher. Instead of assuming there is a hidden large database, it makes more sense to use the sheriff office, jail, and county coordinator in the order the research supports.

The best sequence is direct. Start with the sheriff office or jail for immediate local details. Use the county-government request path when you need the official Meigs County Police Records file. Then use courts, TBI, crash records, FOIL, or VINELink only when the county file clearly points beyond local control.

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