Police Records in Mississippi County

The Mississippi County Sheriff's Office is the main custodian of Mississippi County police records. Arrest records, booking files, jail rosters, and warrant lists come through the sheriff in Blytheville. City police departments in Mississippi County handle incident and accident reports inside city limits. Mississippi County police records are open to the public under Arkansas FOIA with a handful of standard exemptions. Court records tied to arrests appear on Arkansas CourtConnect. This page lists the sheriff's contact info, FOIA steps, fees, and direct links to Mississippi County police records portals and court case search tools.

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Mississippi County Police Records Overview

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BlythevilleCounty Seat
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Mississippi County Sheriff's Office

The Mississippi County Sheriff's Office is at 685 North County Road 599, Luxora, AR 72358. The main phone is (870) 658-2242. The sheriff handles law enforcement in the unincorporated parts of Mississippi County and runs the county jail. Booking records, mugshots, charges, and bond amounts all live with the sheriff. Most Mississippi County police records kept by the sheriff are public under Arkansas FOIA. The office also serves civil process, runs courthouse security, and responds to 911 calls outside any city limits.

Arrest records in Mississippi County show the subject's full legal name, date of birth, date of arrest, charges, bond amount, and booking photo. The sheriff's warrant list shows active warrants by name or warrant number. Dual court districts: Blytheville (west) and Osceola (east). Blytheville Courthouse temporarily at 822 W Plantation Road, Burdette. 2018 stats: 7,550 total offenses, 1,747 arrests. Background checks $5 per search. District Courts in Blytheville, Dell, Gosnell, Leachville, Manila, Osceola. Records requests run through the sheriff's administration staff during regular business hours. Walk-in requests and written requests both work. Deputies respond to calls across the county and the Records Division processes the paperwork that flows in.

Most Mississippi County police records can be requested in person, by mail, by phone, by fax, or by email. Processing usually takes three business days under Arkansas Code § 25-19-105. Copy fees track the actual cost of reproduction, usually around $0.25 per page for plain copies. Certified copies cost more, often $2 to $5 per document. Longer records like body-cam video may carry a modest staff review fee if the clerk needs to redact parts before release.

Arkansas FOIA and Mississippi County Police Records

Arkansas Freedom of Information Act rules cover every police records request in Mississippi County. The statute sits at Ark. Code Ann. § 25-19-105. You must be a citizen of Arkansas to file a request. The custodian has three working days to respond. Proof of Arkansas residency may be asked up front, and the agency can require prepayment if the estimated fee will top $25.

Not every record is open. Ongoing investigations by Mississippi County law enforcement, juvenile files, undercover officer identities, medical records, and concealed handgun license data are all exempt. The agency can redact victim names, minors' personal information, and other sensitive fields before releasing a report. If a Mississippi County police records request is denied, you can appeal to the district or circuit court. The appeal is fast, and no filing fee is charged in most FOIA appeals.

The Attorney General's FOIA Handbook is the go-to guide for Arkansas records requests. It lives on the AG's site at arkansasag.gov. Call the FOIA Hotline at 1-800-482-8982 if an agency does not reply on time. Arkansas FOIA was first passed in 1967 and has been updated many times since. The 2024 edition of the handbook reflects changes from the 94th General Assembly.

Note: Give the Mississippi County agency a case number, date, and name so the clerk can pull the file fast. Broad requests slow things down.

Mississippi County Police Records Portals

Mississippi County keeps a handful of online portals and pages that help the public find police records. The screenshots below show the main resources and where they live on the web.

The Mississippi County Circuit Clerk page is where civil, domestic, criminal, and juvenile court records are kept for the county. See mississippicountyar.org/circuit-clerk.

Mississippi County police records from mississippicountyar.org/circuit-clerk

From the circuit clerk's page you can reach filing forms and court contact info for both Blytheville and Osceola.

Mississippi County Court Records

Arrests that go to formal charges end up on a court docket. The Mississippi County Circuit Clerk is at 200 West Hale Ave, Blytheville (temporary) / 200 West Hale Ave, Osceola, AR 72370. Phone: 870-763-3212. Criminal case files, dockets, and judgments sit with the clerk's office. You can search the same cases online for free through Arkansas CourtConnect. The circuit clerk also holds civil, domestic, and probate files for the county, but criminal files are the ones that tie back to police records.

CourtConnect returns charges, hearing dates, motions filed, and the final outcome of each case. The Arkansas Public Index at arkansas.thepublicindex.org is a second way to reach the same data. Both are free and searchable by party name or case number. Some Mississippi County cases can also be looked up at the courthouse on public access terminals if you prefer to search in person.

Certified court records cost more than plain copies. The clerk can mail certified copies if you send the fee plus a self-addressed envelope. In-person pickup is same day in most cases. Sealed or expunged Mississippi County cases will not appear in search results, and juvenile case files are closed to public view under state law.

Mississippi County Jail and Inmate Records

The Mississippi County Sheriff's Office runs the county jail. Booking files include arrest date, charges, bond, and release date. Many Mississippi County inmates move to state custody after sentencing and appear in the Arkansas Department of Corrections inmate search, which updates each Monday. The state search works by ADC number, name, age, race, county, facility, or offense category.

Victim notifications work through VINELink at vinelink.com. Sign up with an inmate name or ID to get a call or email when the person is released or moved. The service is free and covers state prison moves and county jail transfers alike. Federal inmates in the Bureau of Prisons system do not show up in state or county searches; use the federal BOP inmate locator for those.

Visitation, inmate mail, and bond posting all have their own rules at the Mississippi County jail. Call the sheriff's office ahead of a visit to confirm hours and what ID you need. Posting bond usually means cash or a bondsman and takes a few hours to process through intake.

Background Checks and State Resources

For a statewide criminal history that covers Mississippi County, use the Arkansas Crime Information Center's ARCH tool at ark.org/asp/arch. Each search is $24 and shows felony and misdemeanor convictions, pending felony arrests in the last three years, and sex offender status. ARCH does not include juvenile arrests.

The Arkansas State Police online background check at cbc.ark.org runs name-based and fingerprint checks with a signed release from the subject. Name-based checks are $22. Fingerprint checks are $13. Volunteer rates are lower. Manual requests use ASP Form 122 and cost $25 by mail.

The state sex offender registry is maintained by the Arkansas Crime Information Center. Public search is free by name, address, ZIP, or county. Mississippi County residents can also sign up for address-change alerts. The registry covers Level 2, 3, and 4 offenders across Arkansas.

City Police in Mississippi County

City police departments handle incident and accident reports inside city limits. Cities in Mississippi County keep their own police records separate from the sheriff. Records requests go to each city's police records unit or city clerk. The same Arkansas FOIA rules and three-day response window apply. Fees and request forms vary a little from city to city, but the core process is the same.

For crashes investigated by the Arkansas State Police, the state keeps the central crash file. Reports are ready about ten business days after the crash and cost $10 for drivers and owners, $25 for non-involved parties. Many Arkansas cities also use BuyCrash at buycrash.lexisnexisrisk.com for online crash report downloads.

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