Find Camp County Recent Arrests

Camp County recent arrests are handled by the Sheriff's Office in Pittsburg, Texas. This small county in northeast Texas has a population of about 13,000 people. The Sheriff's Office runs the county jail, processes all bookings, and keeps arrest records on file. If you want to find out who was arrested in Camp County or check on someone in jail, start with the Sheriff's Office. They take phone calls and in-person requests during business hours.

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Camp County Overview

~13K Population
Pittsburg County Seat
198 sq mi Area
76th Judicial District

Camp County Sheriff's Office

All arrest records in Camp County go through the Sheriff's Office. This is the agency that books people into jail, sets up the arrest file, and stores records. The jail runs around the clock. Bookings include fingerprinting, mugshots, and logging all charges into the system.

Camp County sits in the 76th Judicial District of Texas. Pittsburg is the only real town in the county, and most law enforcement activity centers here. The Sheriff's Office patrols the rural areas and works with the Pittsburg Police Department on local matters. Arrests from any agency in the county are processed at the Camp County jail. Bond gets set by a magistrate after the arrest. That data is part of the public record.

Office Camp County Sheriff's Office
Address 126 Church St.
Pittsburg, TX 75686
Phone (903) 856-2769
Hours Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM (jail is 24/7)

Camp County Arrests and Public Records Law

Arrest data in Camp County is public under the Texas Public Information Act. Government Code Chapter 552 says government information is presumed available. You can ask the Sheriff's Office for arrest records and they have to give them to you, with limited exceptions.

Section 552.108(c) lists the arrest details that must always be released. The arrested person's name, age, address, race, sex, and occupation are included. Date and time of arrest, where it happened, the charges, booking info, bond details, and the names of the officers who made the arrest are all public. These facts stay open even when other case details are restricted due to an ongoing investigation.

The Texas Attorney General enforces compliance. If Camp County fails to respond to a records request within ten business days, you can file a complaint with the Open Records Division. They review the situation and can order the records released. Every requestor gets the same treatment under the law.

Camp County Arrest Data Online

The Camp County website provides general county information. You can visit co.camp.tx.us for links to county departments. For statewide arrest data, the DPS Crime Records Division is the central source.

Camp County recent arrests county website homepage

From the county website you can find contact information for the Sheriff's Office and other offices. The DPS Crime Records Division collects arrest data from every agency in the state, including Camp County. Fingerprints and booking data flow into state and FBI databases after each arrest.

How Bookings Work in Camp County

When someone gets arrested in Camp County, they are brought to the county jail for booking. The process starts with fingerprints and a mugshot. Name, date of birth, and physical details are recorded. Charges are entered. Under Government Code Chapter 411, this data goes to DPS within seven days.

A magistrate reviews the arrest and sets bond. The bond amount depends on the charge and the person's history. Some minor offenses allow personal recognizance bonds. More serious charges require cash or surety bonds. All bond data becomes part of the public arrest file. Section 411.135 says the statewide criminal history system reflects convictions and deferred adjudication, so current arrest records at the jail level provide the most up-to-date booking information.

State Prison Records

Camp County inmates who get state prison time can be found through the TDCJ Inmate Search. The free tool covers all state facilities. Search by name or TDCJ number. Call (800) 535-0283 for general information. Offenders serving less than one year stay in the county jail. Longer terms mean transfer to a state unit.

The Texas Commission on Law Enforcement regulates officers across the state. TCOLE sets training standards and handles complaints. All peace officers and jailers in Camp County fall under their oversight. They license more than 100,000 officers statewide.

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Nearby Counties

Camp County is in northeast Texas near several other small counties. Make sure you have the right county for the arrest you want to look up.