Search Montgomery County Recent Bookings

Montgomery County Recent Bookings are best checked in a straight line. Start with the sheriff roster, then move to the jail details, and then use the public records path if you need a copy or a deeper look. Clarksville and the wider county can move a booking through more than one office fast, so the cleanest search is the one that keeps the name, the date, and the office in the same frame. This page gathers the county sources that matter most and keeps the search on official ground from the first check to the last follow-up.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Montgomery County Recent Bookings Quick Facts

24 Hours Roster refresh cycle
11,000+ Annual bookings
500 Average daily population
Clarksville County seat

Montgomery County Recent Bookings Sources

The Montgomery County Sheriff's Office keeps the main roster at mcgtn.org/sheriff. The research says the online inmate roster updates every 24 hours and can be searched by first name, last name, or both. That makes it easy to sort a new booking from a longer case trail. The record fields are practical, too. They show the full name, mugshot, charges, arresting agency, bond, booking date and time, and housing location. Those are the first facts most people need when they want to check a recent arrest in Clarksville or elsewhere in Montgomery County.

One county image comes from the public inquiry booking view. It gives the page a direct booking source and keeps the search tied to the county system rather than a copied summary. That matters when you want the result to stay close to the official record path.

Lead-in: the public booking view at api.mcgtn.org/publicinquiry/booking/view is the source behind the county booking image below.

Montgomery County Recent Bookings county booking view

The image helps show the booking side of the county record trail and gives the page a clear visual anchor for Montgomery County Recent Bookings.

The sheriff office page also helps when you need a simple public access point for the county. It is the right place to begin if you want the county's own view of a booking before you move into jail details or records requests. When the name is common, the roster and the date stamp do more work than a loose search ever will.

Montgomery County Recent Bookings Search

The county roster is strongest when you already know part of the name or the booking window. Search by first name, last name, or both. That is the clean route when you are checking a fresh arrest and want to know whether the person is still in custody. The booking page shows the record fast, and the field list helps you spot the right person without guessing at the charge or bond.

The roster is also useful because it moves on a daily cycle. A record can appear in the county feed before a paper file reaches the next desk. That is normal in a busy county. If you do not see the person at first, check the time of day and the booking date before you move on. Small date gaps are often the reason a search looks thin.

What to keep ready:

  • Full name or a strong last-name match
  • Approximate booking date
  • Whether you want sheriff, jail, or court records first
  • Any bond figure or charge clue you already have
  • The city or agency you think made the arrest

If the county result is still not enough, Tennessee state tools can help you cross-check the person and the case. The TBI criminal history page at tn.gov/tbi/criminal-history-records.html gives a statewide adult record path, while the TDOC FOIL page at tn.gov/correction/agency-services/foil.html and the live FOIL search at apps.tn.gov/foil-app/search.jsp can help if the person has entered state custody or supervision.

Montgomery County Jail Details

The county jail side sits at 116 Commerce Street in Clarksville, with the Montgomery County Workhouse also part of the detention system. The main phone is 931-648-0611. The research says the jail books over 11,000 inmates each year and has an average daily population of about 500. That tells you the county has a busy custody system, so the roster and the jail office matter just as much as the sheriff page when you are trying to read a recent booking.

Jail leadership also matters when you need to know who runs the house. Martin Pierce is listed as jail administrator, and Jason Litchfield is listed as lieutenant of inmate and intake services. Those names can help if you are calling about a custody question.

The county image tied to the sheriff page gives a second official view of the booking path. It is a good visual match for the jail side of Montgomery County Recent Bookings.

Lead-in: the sheriff page is the source behind the county sheriff image below.

Montgomery County Recent Bookings sheriff source

The image reinforces the county custody path and shows where the booking trail begins for Montgomery County.

Mail, commissary, and visitation can all come up after a booking. In Montgomery County, mail is screened, commissary uses a third-party system, and video visitation is used instead of in-person visits. That means the jail is not just a list. It is also the place where the day-to-day custody rules are set.

Montgomery County Recent Bookings Records

If you need a copy or a formal request, use the public records path instead of relying only on the roster. Montgomery County asks that requests go to the Public Records Coordinator at Montgomery County Government, 1 Millennium Plaza, Clarksville, TN 37040. The phone number listed in the research is 931-648-5787. Requests can be made in person, by mail, or electronically, and Tennessee residency is required for all requests. The response time is seven business days under the county process.

That records path matters when a booking has already moved from the first custody check into a paper request. It is also the better route if you want a copy of a booking-related file or a record that is not shown fully on the roster. Give the office the name, the date range, and the kind of record you want. A tight request usually gets a cleaner result.

Public access in Tennessee is broad, but it still has limits. If the record has been sealed or otherwise held back, the county office may not show every detail at the first step. The right move is to use the roster, then the records office, then the state tools if needed. That keeps Montgomery County Recent Bookings clear and keeps you from asking the wrong desk for the wrong file.

Note: Booking data can change fast, so confirm the current roster and the records office status before you rely on one result.

Montgomery County Mail And Visits

Jail mail, commissary, and visits can all matter after a booking. The research says inmate mail must be written on white lined paper in blue or black ink and placed in plain white envelopes. Mail is screened before it reaches the inmate. That is worth knowing because it sets the pace for contact after a new arrest. The address format is also specific, so it helps to double-check the inmate name and number before you send anything.

Commissary uses VendEngine. Deposits can be made online, by phone, or at an in-person kiosk in the jail lobby. Visitation is video only through Securus Technologies, and visits must be scheduled in advance. The schedule runs on selected evenings and weekends, with the exact window tied to housing location. Those details do not change the booking record itself, but they do shape what happens after the arrest.

When you want to confirm a bond or a warrant, the sheriff office is still the right local call. The research says a public warrant search is available by full first and last name, and the Warrants Division uses the same main phone number as the jail. That makes the sheriff page the best local first stop if the booking has already turned into a warrant question.

State Tools For Recent Bookings

State tools help when the county page is not enough. The Tennessee court information site at tncrtinfo.com can help you see whether a county booking turned into a case or hearing. The Tennessee Open Records Counsel page at tn.gov/openrecords can help if a records request stalls or if you need a plain explanation of the access process. Those pages are useful because they keep the search tied to official public records, not a guess.

The Tennessee expungement page at tn.gov/courts/trial-courts/criminal-courts/expungements.html can matter if a past record no longer shows the same way in public search results. That is one reason to check the county roster, the county records office, and the state pages together. A gap in one place does not always mean the record is gone. It may mean the record moved, or that the public view is limited.

For Montgomery County Recent Bookings, that layered search is the safe move. Start local, then widen the search only if the first result is not enough.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results

Montgomery County Recent Bookings Summary

Montgomery County Recent Bookings work best when you treat the sheriff roster, the jail office, and the public records coordinator as one record trail. The roster gives the first look. The jail gives the custody side. The records office gives the copy path. That is the cleanest way to search Clarksville-area bookings without getting pulled into the wrong office.

If you need the broader Tennessee view, the TBI, FOIL, court, and open records pages give you the next layer. Used together, they keep the search grounded and practical.