Bailey County Recent Arrests

Recent arrests in Bailey County are processed by the Sheriff's Office in Muleshoe, the county seat. This West Texas county sits near the New Mexico border and has a population just over 7,000. Bailey County is part of the South Plains region and covers about 827 square miles of mostly flat farmland. The Sheriff's Office handles all bookings and maintains arrest records. Arrest data is public under Texas law, and you can reach the Sheriff by phone or visit the courthouse in Muleshoe to check on recent arrests and jail information.

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Bailey County Overview

~7.1K Population
Muleshoe County Seat
287th Judicial District
827 sq mi Land Area

Bailey County Arrest Records

The Bailey County Sheriff's Office is responsible for all law enforcement in the unincorporated parts of the county. They also run the jail facility where all local bookings are processed. Muleshoe is the only town of any size in the county, and it has a small police department that handles calls within city limits. But all arrestees end up at the county jail regardless of which agency made the arrest.

Arrest records include the person's name, charges, bond amount, booking date, and other standard details. The Texas Public Information Act under Government Code Chapter 552 makes this data public. Section 552.108(c) prevents law enforcement from holding back basic arrest information. Bailey County follows the same rules as every other county in Texas. You can call the Sheriff, write a letter, or visit in person to request records.

The Bailey County website provides general contact information and links to county offices. The screenshot below shows the main page.

Bailey County recent arrests county website

This site gives you a starting point for finding phone numbers and office locations. Bailey County does not have a dedicated online jail search tool, so direct contact with the Sheriff's Office is the primary way to check on bookings. Muleshoe is the center of all county government operations. The courthouse, jail, and clerk offices are all located in town. If you plan to visit in person, you can handle most records requests in a single trip to the Muleshoe courthouse.

Search Bailey County Booking Records

Bailey County is small enough that it does not maintain an online booking search portal. This is typical for rural Texas counties with fewer than 10,000 residents. The jail facility is modest, and arrest volume stays low compared to urban areas. To check on a recent arrest, your best options are calling the Sheriff's Office or visiting the courthouse in Muleshoe.

When you call, the jail staff can tell you if someone is currently in custody. They can share the charges and bond amount. For older records that are no longer in the active system, a written request may be needed. Send your request to the Bailey County Sheriff's Office in Muleshoe and include the person's full name and any identifying details you know. The state gives agencies 10 business days to respond, though simple checks often come back faster.

Court records for Bailey County criminal cases are maintained by the District Clerk and County Clerk. The District Clerk handles felony cases from the 287th Judicial District Court. The County Clerk manages misdemeanor case files. Both offices are in the Bailey County Courthouse in Muleshoe. Certified copies of court documents come with a per-page fee.

Texas Arrest Search Tools

Because Bailey County lacks an online jail roster, statewide databases are especially helpful. The DPS Crime Records Division collects criminal data from all Texas counties. Under Government Code Chapter 411, the DPS runs the Computerized Criminal History System. This statewide database tracks arrests and convictions and feeds data to the FBI's national systems.

The DPS Criminal History Search costs $3.00 per lookup and covers every county in Texas, including Bailey. You need an account and search credits to use it. Section 411.135 of the Government Code covers how conviction and deferred adjudication records are stored in this system. The TDCJ Inmate Search tracks anyone sentenced to state prison.

The Texas Courts Case Search provides appellate records for cases that moved beyond the trial level. The Texas Attorney General's office oversees public records disputes if a county denies your request. These statewide tools fill in what the local Bailey County system does not offer online.

Bailey County Law Enforcement

Bailey County sits on the western edge of the Texas South Plains. The New Mexico state line forms its western boundary. US Highway 84 passes through Muleshoe, bringing some through-traffic. Agriculture drives the local economy, with cotton, grain, and cattle being the main products. The low population keeps arrest numbers modest. Most bookings involve traffic violations, DWI, drug possession, and warrant arrests.

The Sheriff's Office patrols the vast rural area outside of Muleshoe. State troopers from the Texas Department of Public Safety also work the highways in this part of West Texas. The Texas Commission on Law Enforcement certifies all peace officers in Bailey County. TCOLE tracks officer credentials and ensures training standards are met. Because the county is so far from major cities, the nearest large population center is Lubbock, about 70 miles to the east in Lubbock County.

Cross-border activity with New Mexico can sometimes affect Bailey County arrests. People passing between the two states on Highway 84 may be stopped in Bailey County. Any arrest made within the county goes through the Muleshoe jail regardless of the person's home state. Records from these arrests are part of the Bailey County system and subject to the same public access rules.

The 287th Judicial District Court handles felony cases in Bailey County. The district judge covers several counties in this region, so court sessions may not happen every week. Misdemeanor cases go through the county court. Both courts maintain records through the clerk offices in the Muleshoe courthouse. If you need court case records rather than just booking data, the District Clerk handles felony files and the County Clerk manages misdemeanor records. Certified copies have a per-page fee. For simple arrest information, the Sheriff's Office remains the fastest and most direct contact point.

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