Screven County Released Inmates Records

Screven County released inmates records can be found through the Sheriff's Office in Sylvania. The county jail processes all local arrests, and booking data is available to the public under Georgia law.

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Screven County Quick Facts

~14,000Population
SylvaniaCounty Seat
OgeecheeJudicial Circuit
648 sq miCounty Size

Screven County Sheriff's Office and Jail

The Screven County Sheriff's Office in Sylvania is where released inmates records are kept for this area of east Georgia. The sheriff runs the county jail and logs every booking that comes through. Deputies, Sylvania police, and other local agencies bring arrested persons to the Screven County jail for processing. Each arrest creates a record that stays on file.

Staff at the jail take a booking photo. They log the charges. They note the date and time. Bond gets set by the court. When the person leaves, whether by bonding out, finishing a sentence, or getting transferred, that release goes into the file too. All of this adds up to a released inmate record that the public can request.

Screven County has a population of about 14,000 people spread across a large rural area. The county covers 648 square miles, which is one of the bigger land areas in the state. Despite the size, law enforcement in Screven County runs through the sheriff's office and the Sylvania Police Department. Both feed into the same jail system.

You can reach the Screven County Sheriff's Office by phone during business hours. Staff can tell you if a specific person has been booked and released from the jail. For a formal copy of the records, you may need to file a written request.

Accessing Released Inmates Data in Screven County

Georgia's Open Records Act makes most jail records public. O.C.G.A. § 50-18-70 lays out the basic rule: government records are open to the public unless a specific law says otherwise. Booking logs, arrest records, and release data from the Screven County jail fall under this rule. You do not need to give a reason for wanting the records. You just have to ask.

O.C.G.A. § 50-18-72 lists the exceptions. Some records are protected. Juvenile files are sealed. Active investigation files can be withheld. Medical records of inmates are private. But the core booking and release data for adults in the Screven County jail is open. Names, charges, bond amounts, arrest dates, and release dates are all fair game.

To get these records, you have a few options. Visit the Screven County Sheriff's Office in person during business hours. Bring identification and tell the staff what you need. They can pull up records on the spot for recent bookings. For older files, it may take a bit longer.

You can also send a written open records request by mail. Address it to the Screven County Sheriff's Office in Sylvania, GA 30467. Spell out what you want. The law gives the office three business days to respond. They must either give you the records, tell you when the records will be ready, or explain why the records are exempt.

Fees for copies are usually low. The office can charge for paper, ink, and staff time if the request is large. They have to give you an estimate before they start the work. For a basic check on one or two released inmates in Screven County, the cost should be minimal.

Statewide Tools for Screven County Inmate Searches

The Screven County jail handles local inmates. But many people who start in a county jail end up in the state prison system. For those cases, you need to use the Georgia Department of Corrections offender search at gdc.georgia.gov/offender-info/find-offender. This free tool lets you search by name for anyone in a state facility. It shows the person's current status, facility, and projected release date.

Georgia Department of Corrections portal used for Screven County released inmates searches

The GDC website gives free access to the statewide offender database for anyone to use.

The Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles at pap.georgia.gov makes parole decisions for state inmates. If someone arrested in Screven County ended up in state prison and then got paroled, this board handled that decision. The Department of Community Supervision at dcs.georgia.gov then tracks that person while they are on parole or probation.

For a full criminal history check, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation at gbi.georgia.gov runs the state's background check system. O.C.G.A. § 35-3-37 sets the rules for who can get these checks and how they work. The GBI pulls from a statewide database that includes arrest data from Screven County and all other Georgia counties. There is a fee for this service.

Screven County Court System

Screven County is part of the Ogeechee Judicial Circuit. This circuit also includes Bulloch and Effingham counties. The Superior Court hears felony cases. The State Court or Magistrate Court handles lesser charges. Which court a case lands in affects how the records are filed and where you look for case details after someone is released from the Screven County jail.

Court records and jail records are not the same thing. The jail keeps booking and release data. The court keeps case files, including charges filed by the district attorney, plea deals, trial results, and sentences. If you want the full picture on a released inmate from Screven County, you may need to check both the sheriff's office and the clerk of court.

The Screven County Clerk of Superior Court keeps records of all felony cases. Misdemeanor cases go through the State Court or Magistrate Court. These records are also public under O.C.G.A. § 50-18-70, with the same exceptions that apply to any government record in Georgia.

What Released Inmates Records Show in Screven County

A typical released inmate record from the Screven County jail includes the person's full name, date of birth, and physical description. It lists the charges at the time of booking. It shows the arrest date and the arresting agency, whether that was the Screven County Sheriff's Office, Sylvania PD, or another agency. The bond amount and type are noted. And the release date, along with the reason for release, rounds out the file.

Some records may include a booking photo. The photo is public record in Georgia. Third-party sites sometimes collect and post these photos online. That can be a sore point for people who were arrested but never convicted. Georgia has passed laws limiting how mugshot sites can operate, but the photos themselves are still public record when they come from the Screven County jail or any other Georgia jail.

Release reasons vary. "Bonded out" means the person paid bond and left. "Time served" means they did their full sentence. "Transferred" means they went to another facility, often a state prison. "Released on own recognizance" means a judge let them go without bond. Each of these shows up in the Screven County released inmates file.

Parole and Probation Records for Screven County

O.C.G.A. § 42-9-53 deals with how parole information is handled at the state level. When an inmate from Screven County gets paroled from a state prison, the Board of Pardons and Paroles decides the terms. The person then reports to a parole officer through the Department of Community Supervision.

Probation works differently. A judge can sentence someone to probation instead of jail time, or as part of a split sentence. In Screven County, felony probation is supervised by the state DCS. Misdemeanor probation often gets handled by a private company. Either way, records exist that show who is on probation and what conditions they must meet.

If you want to know whether a released inmate from Screven County is currently under supervision, the DCS is the right place to check. Their website has some search tools, though the level of detail you can get online is limited. A formal records request may be needed for full details.

Tips for Finding Screven County Released Inmates

Call the sheriff's office first. It is the fastest way to check on a recent booking or release. For older records, put your request in writing. For state prison inmates from Screven County, use the GDC search online. For a criminal history that covers arrests statewide, go through the GBI.

Third-party jail roster sites sometimes list Screven County inmates. These sites pull public data and post it online. Coverage for smaller counties like Screven can be spotty. The data may lag behind the official records by a day or more. Always check with the sheriff's office if you need confirmed, current info.

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Nearby Counties

These counties border Screven County in east Georgia. Each has its own jail and released inmates records.