Clark County Booking Records

Clark County booking reports are kept by the Clark County Sheriff's Office and the county detention center in Arkadelphia. The sheriff handles intake for every arrest inside Clark County, including mugshots, charges, and bond amounts. You can search Clark County booking reports by contacting the sheriff's office directly or by using state tools like ACIC's ARCH system. Older booking files come out of the records division. Call ahead or file a written request to get the file you need.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Clark County Jail Overview

ArkadelphiaCounty Seat
FOIAPublic Access
ARArkansas
SheriffRecords Holder

Clark County Sheriff's Office

The Clark County Sheriff's Office runs law enforcement for the unincorporated parts of Clark County and holds the booking file for every arrest. Call the sheriff's office during business hours to reach the records division. The sheriff is the custodian of Clark County booking reports under Arkansas law. When a person is arrested inside the county, they are taken to the county detention center for booking. That process covers fingerprinting, a mugshot, charge entry, and bond setup.

Clark County Sheriff's Office maintains arrest and booking records for the county.

For day-to-day requests, the records division can share basic details over the phone. Full copies of a booking report take a written FOIA request under Ark. Code Ann. § 25-19-101. Plain copies usually run $0.25 to $0.50 a page. Certified copies cost more.

The Clark County Government portal is a starting point for Clark County booking reports and related records.

Clark County government portal for booking reports

The site links out to county offices, public records request forms, and contact info tied to Clark County booking reports.

Clark County Detention Center

The Clark County Detention Center is the main jail for anyone arrested in the county. Booking covers search, fingerprinting, a mugshot, charge entry, and bond setup. Each person gets a booking number that ties them to the jail file and any court case.

The facility holds pretrial detainees and people serving short sentences under a year. People with longer sentences get moved to the Arkansas Division of Correction. The sheriff's records division can share current custody info over the phone or in person.

Note: Clark County booking reports usually hit the records system within a day of intake. Call the sheriff's office if a recent arrest is not yet showing.

FOIA for Clark County Booking Reports

The Arkansas Freedom of Information Act at Ark. Code Ann. § 25-19-101 opens most Clark County booking reports to the public. You file a written request with the sheriff's records division. List the person's full name, date of birth, and rough date of arrest. The custodian has three business days to respond under § 25-19-105.

Some records stay closed. Juvenile arrest records are exempt under Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-309. Active investigations stay sealed while the case is open. Victim identity in sex offenses is redacted. Everything else tends to come out on request.

Fees for copies vary. Inspection at the sheriff's office is free during business hours. Plain copies usually cost a quarter per page. Certified copies carry a higher charge. The fee schedule follows Ark. Code Ann. § 25-19-105(d)(3).

State Tools for Clark County

Several state and federal tools tie into Clark County booking reports. The CourtConnect portal at caseinfo.arcourts.gov shows court case filings, hearings, and dispositions. Coverage varies by county, but most Arkansas courts are in the system.

The Arkansas Crime Information Center at 322 S. Main Street, Ste. 615, Little Rock, AR 72201, (501) 682-2222, keeps the state's central criminal history data under Ark. Code Ann. § 12-12-201. The Arkansas State Police background check at cbc.ark.org handles paid name-based and fingerprint-based checks with subject consent.

Federal arrests are a separate path. Use the Federal Bureau of Prisons Inmate Locator when federal agents are involved.

Misuse Warning: Using Clark County booking reports or ACIC data for a purpose not listed in the request is a Class A misdemeanor under Arkansas state law.

Laws That Govern Clark County Booking Reports

Arkansas arrest law is at Ark. Code Ann. § 16-81-101 to 16-81-407. Officers in Clark County can arrest with or without a warrant when there is probable cause. Department of Correction record duties come from Ark. Code Ann. § 12-27-113. That section orders the state to keep full files on every inmate in custody.

Criminal history access rules are at Ark. Code Ann. § 12-12-1008 to 12-12-1011. That section blocks release of some non-conviction data like arrests more than a year old with no disposition, acquittals, felony arrests over three years old, and unresolved misdemeanors. The ARCH system itself was set up by Act 1185 of 2015, codified at Ark. Code Ann. § 12-12-1501 et seq.

Juvenile Clark County booking reports are closed under Ark. Code Ann. § 9-27-309. The right to see and challenge your own file lives in Ark. Code Ann. § 12-12-1013. Exemptions in the FOIA are read narrowly. When a record does not fit squarely in an exemption, it has to come out. The Arkansas Legislature keeps the full code text online.

What's in a Clark County Booking Report

A full Clark County booking report usually carries a standard set of fields. Not every file has all of them, and smaller counties often share less than bigger ones. The core fields are the ones you need most.

Common fields in a booking file include full legal name plus any aliases, age or date of birth, sex, race, height, weight, and a mugshot. Next come booking number, intake date and time, arresting agency, charge list with statute codes, bond type, and bond amount. Court date and location show up when a case has been set.

Mugshots come from the booking photo taken during intake. The law enforcement staff take a front-facing view and sometimes a side profile. Under the Arkansas FOIA, these photos are generally public. Certified copies from the sheriff's records division carry a small fee, often in the $5 to $10 range per photo.

Help with Clark County Booking Reports

If you need help reading a file, sealing an old case, or challenging a record, a few groups can step in. Legal Aid of Arkansas at (870) 972-9224 covers most of the state and offers self-help guides for criminal record issues. The Center for Arkansas Legal Services at (501) 376-3423 serves central Arkansas, which overlaps with Clark County when your case is near Little Rock.

The Arkansas Bar Association runs a lawyer referral line at (501) 375-4606. A referral gives you a short first consult with a lawyer who takes criminal or records cases. Sealing an old record falls under Ark. Code Ann. § 16-90-1401 et seq. Call a lawyer or a legal aid office to walk through what applies to your Clark County file.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results