Search Haywood County Recent Bookings

Haywood County Recent Bookings are best handled as an office-first and jail-first search because the official county source set does not confirm a public online inmate roster. If you need to check a recent arrest in Brownsville, Stanton, or anywhere else in the county, the sheriff office, court clerk, county clerk, and county court pages give you the cleanest path to the local record. That keeps the search tied to the offices that actually manage custody, court follow-up, and county records, instead of sending you into a broad third-party summary that may already be out of date.

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Haywood County Recent Bookings Quick Facts

Billy Garrett Jr. Sheriff
Haywood County Jail (Brownsville) Custody reference in Research.md
Mary Margaret Lonon Circuit Court Clerk
731-772-2362 County Clerk phone

Haywood County Recent Bookings Sources

The official county home page at haywoodtn.gov is the first source to open because it routes you to the sheriff office, county clerk, and court system pages that matter for a recent booking question. The county home page also keeps the county seat centered in Brownsville, which is useful when you are trying to stay close to the right office rather than guessing from a statewide list. For Haywood County Recent Bookings, that local structure matters more than an online index that may not be maintained by the county at all.

The sheriff page at haywoodtn.gov/haywood-county-sheriff/ lists Sheriff Billy Garrett Jr. at 100 South Dupree Avenue in Brownsville with phone 731-772-6158, fax 731-772-7705, and the sheriff email on the county site. That is the strongest office to call first if you want to know whether a person is in custody, whether the booking is new, or whether the record has already moved into another county office. The page also shows that Haywood County treats law enforcement and records as an interconnected local process, not as a public roster feed.

The court side is anchored by the Circuit Court Clerk page at haywoodtn.gov/government/court-systems/court-clerks-office/, which names Mary Margaret Lonon and gives the office at 100 South Dupree Avenue, Brownsville, TN 38012. The page says the clerk's office is responsible for maintaining all records in the Haywood County Circuit and Juvenile/General Sessions Court. It also notes that General Sessions Criminal and Traffic Court handles criminal warrants and traffic tickets issued by the sheriff's department or state troopers, which makes it a practical follow-up when a booking starts to become a court issue.

Haywood County also has a county clerk office at haywoodtn.gov/government/county-clerk/. The page identifies Sonya Castellaw and lists the office at 1 North Washington Avenue, Brownsville, TN 38012, with phone 731-772-2362, fax 731-772-1213, and hours of 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. That office is not the custody desk, but it is part of the county record trail that can help once a recent booking has started to branch into paperwork, licenses, or other official county records.

Haywood County's court system page at haywoodtn.gov/government/court-systems/general-sessions-juvenile-court/ identifies Judge Jenny Smith Scott and confirms the court contact at 731-772-1112. The chancery court page at haywoodtn.gov/government/court-systems/chancery-court/ names Felicia R. Bond as Clerk & Master and shows that chancery records can be viewed on site under the county public records policy. That is useful context when a county office needs to explain which part of the local court system owns the next step in a record trail.

Lead-in: the Tennessee Department of Correction page at tn.gov/correction.html is the state fallback behind the image below.

Haywood County Recent Bookings Tennessee Department of Correction fallback

The image gives Haywood County Recent Bookings a state-level backup path when the county office needs a phone check or when the sheriff side is still the best place to verify custody first.

How to Search Haywood County Recent Bookings

Start with the sheriff office if you are checking a very recent booking. Give the full name first, then narrow the request with a booking date, arrest location, or any charge clue you already have. That order matters because Haywood County Recent Bookings are easier to confirm when you keep the question small and direct. The sheriff office is the custody side of the search, and the court clerk or county clerk become more useful only after the record starts to move into paperwork or hearing territory.

If you are not sure where the booking landed, think in terms of custody first and records second. Haywood County's official pages make that split visible. The sheriff handles the booking question, the Circuit Court Clerk handles the circuit and juvenile/general sessions record trail, and the county clerk helps when the issue is tied to county records more broadly. That structure is what makes a county-based search better than a random internet search. It keeps the answer in the office that actually controls the next step.

Keep a few details ready before you call or visit:

  • Full name or the closest match you have
  • Approximate booking date or arrest date
  • The town, road, or location tied to the arrest if known
  • Whether you need custody status or court follow-up
  • Any charge clue that helps narrow the office search

That approach works well because Haywood County Recent Bookings are office-based in the source set. You get better results when you stay close to the sheriff office first, then move to the clerk or court offices only if the record has already progressed out of the jail setting. The county home page, sheriff page, and court pages are enough to keep the search official and local without adding any outside source that does not control the record.

Haywood County Jail And Office Details

The jail reference in the research is Haywood County Jail (Brownsville). That matters because the jail is the custody side of Haywood County Recent Bookings, and the sheriff office is the place that can confirm whether a person is still there. The sheriff office at 100 South Dupree Avenue gives you a direct county contact, and the county source set keeps that address tied to the same Brownsville office complex as the court clerk. For a fresh booking, that is the best first stop.

The sheriff page is also useful because it identifies Billy Garrett Jr. and ties the office to public records and media policy. That tells you Haywood County expects the sheriff office to be a direct county information point, not just a back-end holding facility. When you are checking recent bookings, that distinction matters. It means you are asking the office that manages the custody side, not a third-party database that may not know whether the person has already moved on to court.

The court clerk office at 100 South Dupree Avenue is the next major local contact if the booking has turned into a court issue. The office hours are 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, and the contact number is 731-772-1112. The office says it is responsible for maintaining all records in the Haywood County Circuit and Juvenile/General Sessions Court, which makes it the place to call if you need to know whether a recent booking has been docketed, transferred, or entered into the official court file.

Haywood County General Sessions and Juvenile Court uses the same office number and building as the court clerk, which is helpful because criminal warrants and traffic tickets issued by the sheriff's department can route through that office. Judge Jenny Smith Scott is the listed judge, and the official page shows the county has a concrete court path for the kinds of cases that can follow a booking. That does not mean every booking becomes a court hearing immediately, but it does mean the county has a clear office trail once custody changes into a docket question.

The county clerk office at 1 North Washington Avenue is part of the same county record landscape. Sonya Castellaw's office handles county records work, and the listed hours make it a reliable daytime contact for the records side of a search. If the sheriff says a person is no longer in the jail setting, the county clerk can help you move from the custody question to the paperwork question without leaving the official county system.

Haywood County Court Records

Haywood County's court system is organized enough to make a recent booking search feel less guesswork-driven. The court clerk page explains that the Circuit Court Clerk's office maintains records for the circuit and juvenile/general sessions courts, while General Sessions Criminal and Traffic Court handles criminal warrants and traffic tickets from the sheriff's department or state troopers. That gives you a real office path when a booking starts to become a court matter. If the person you are asking about was booked and then charged, the court clerk is usually the next county contact after the sheriff.

The General Sessions / Juvenile Court page adds practical context because it lists the court schedule and confirms that Judge Jenny Smith Scott presides there. It also shows that the office handles criminal, domestic violence, civil, traffic, DUI, juvenile, child support, and recovery court dockets. That helps you understand why a booking can move from a custody question to a hearing question in a fairly short time. The office is not just a courtroom, it is the county's route for the next step in a criminal or traffic record.

The chancery court page is less about immediate custody and more about the county's wider record system, but it still matters for a complete official picture. Felicia R. Bond serves as Clerk & Master, the office is at 100 South Dupree Avenue, and the county says chancery records can be viewed on site under the public records policy. That is a useful reminder that Haywood County manages multiple record types through separate offices. A recent booking may start in the sheriff office, but the county's broader record structure is what carries the case forward.

If you already know the booking date, use it when you call the court clerk. If you do not, use the full name and ask whether the office can point you to the right docket or court division. That keeps the request narrow and gives the office a better chance of answering quickly. In Haywood County, the sheriff, court clerk, general sessions court, and chancery court all sit inside the same county network, so the record trail stays local even when the question widens beyond custody.

State Backups For Haywood County Recent Bookings

When the county offices need a backup check, Tennessee state tools are the right second step. The public records entry point at tn.gov/openrecords is the official place to start if you need help understanding how to make a request. The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation criminal history page at tn.gov/tbi/criminal-history-records.html helps when the question grows beyond a single county booking and into a broader history search. Those pages do not replace the sheriff office, but they do give you an official state backup when the county says to widen the search.

Lead-in: the official VINE service at vinelink.com is the source behind the image below.

Haywood County Recent Bookings VINE fallback

The image gives Haywood County Recent Bookings a second official custody checkpoint when you want confirmation after the sheriff office call or when the office tells you to check back later.

The Tennessee courts expungements page is also useful if a record later becomes harder to see in public view. A booking can still exist even when the public trail looks thin, and that page helps explain one reason that happens. For Haywood County, the state pages work best as a follow-up to the county offices, not as a replacement for them.

Haywood County Recent Bookings Summary

Haywood County Recent Bookings are easiest to handle when you accept that the county is office-based and jail-first in the source set. The sheriff office, county clerk, court clerk, general sessions court, and chancery court give you a real local path to the record, and the jail reference in Brownsville keeps the search tied to the county seat. That is enough to build a practical search without relying on a public roster that the county does not clearly publish.

For most searches, the best path is simple. Start with the sheriff office, confirm the jail side, and move to the clerk or court offices only if the record has shifted or you need a court follow-up. If the county office tells you to widen the search, use the Tennessee state tools as the next step. That approach keeps Haywood County Recent Bookings accurate, official, and local.

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