Brown County Arrest Records

Brown County arrest records are held by the Sheriff's Office in Georgetown, Ohio. The county jail keeps a roster of all current inmates that you can check for free. Each booking entry shows names, charges, and bond info. If you need a full arrest report, you can ask the Sheriff's Office in person or by mail. Brown County sits in the southwest part of the state and handles its own law enforcement through the Sheriff's Office. Court records from Brown County also tie into the arrest data for anyone who wants a more complete picture of a case.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Brown County Arrest Records Overview

43,432 Population
Georgetown County Seat
Public Record Access
Free Roster Search

Brown County Sheriff's Office

The Brown County Sheriff's Office is at 750 Mount Orab Pike in Georgetown. This is where all Brown County arrest records are kept. The office runs the jail, handles patrol, and takes care of civil process work. You can walk in during business hours to ask for copies of arrest reports or other law enforcement records. Staff can help you fill out a records request form if you need one.

The Brown County Sheriff's Office website has info on jail services, law enforcement, and public records access.

Brown County jail inmate search for arrest records

The jail roster on the site lets you search for people currently in custody at the Brown County Jail. You can view names, charges, and booking dates from any device.

Brown County arrest records include the person's name, date of birth, charges, booking date, arresting agency, and bond amount. The Sheriff's Office also keeps mugshots on file. If you want copies of these records, you can submit a written request. Include the full name of the person and any dates you have. The office will pull matching records and let you know about any copy fees. Most requests get handled within a few business days, though it can take longer if the record is old or involves a sealed case.

The jail roster is the best place to start. It shows who is in custody right now. Each entry has the inmate's name, age, charges, and bond. The list gets updated on a regular basis. You do not need to create an account or pay to use it. Just go to the Sheriff's website and find the jail roster link.

Brown County court records can fill in the gaps. The court system tracks cases from filing through disposition. You can search by name or case number to find out what happened after an arrest. Traffic cases, misdemeanors, and felony cases all show up in the court records system. This helps when you need more than just the booking info.

For a deeper check, the Ohio DRC Offender Search covers state prison inmates. If someone was arrested in Brown County and later sent to a state facility, the DRC database will have their record. You can search by name or offender number. Results show sentence length, facility, and release dates. This tool is free to use.

Note: The Brown County jail roster may not show very recent bookings since updates happen on a set schedule throughout the day.

Public Records Law in Brown County

Ohio law says arrest records are public. That is the rule. Under ORC Section 149.43, anyone can ask for copies of arrest records from a government office. You do not have to say who you are. You do not have to explain why you want the records. The law protects your right to access them.

Brown County arrest records that are public include the arrest charges, suspect name, date of birth, booking number, booking date, arrest date and time, arresting agency, release date if one exists, mugshot, and bail or bond info. That covers what most people look for. Some records stay off limits though. Juvenile records are sealed by state law. Anything tied to a grand jury stays confidential. Records that have been expunged or sealed by court order will not show up in a public search.

To get copies, send a written request to the Brown County Sheriff's Office at 750 Mount Orab Pike, Georgetown, OH 45121. Put "Public Records Request" on the envelope. You can also visit in person. Looking at records on site is free under Ohio law. Copies come with a small per-page fee. The office has up to a reasonable time to fill your request, but most are done within a week.

Brown County Background Checks

The BCI WebCheck system runs fingerprint-based background checks. A state check costs $22. An FBI check costs $30. Both together run $52. Electronic prints give results in hours. The old ink method takes up to 30 days. WebCheck sites include sheriff's offices and some police departments across the state.

Under ORC 109.572, the Bureau of Criminal Investigation keeps a statewide criminal history database. It pulls data from courts and law enforcement across all of Ohio. This is the most complete check you can get at the state level. Brown County arrest records feed into this system along with records from every other county.

If a public office turns down your records request, the Ohio Court of Claims has a mediation process. You file a complaint and the court helps sort it out. The Ohio State Bar Association can also point you to a lawyer who handles public records cases. Their referral service is free to use.

Ohio Arrest Records Tools

Several state tools go beyond what Brown County offers on its own. The Ohio Supreme Court runs a case search that covers courts across the state. You can look up cases by name and see charges, case status, and hearing dates. This works well when you know someone was arrested but are not sure which county handled the case.

The Ohio Attorney General's office runs the Sunshine Laws program. It explains how public records work in Ohio, what fees offices can charge, and what to do when a request gets denied. Their guides cover arrest records, police reports, and court filings. If you have questions about your rights under Ohio's open records law, that is a good place to start.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results

Nearby Counties

Brown County sits next to several other Ohio counties. If an arrest took place in a neighboring area, check that county's Sheriff's Office records instead.