Oregon 24 Hour Booking Records

Oregon 24 hour booking records list people booked into county jails across the state within the last day. Each of Oregon's 36 counties runs its own jail and keeps its own booking log. Many sheriff offices post a jail roster on their website so the public can see who was recently arrested and booked. You can search these 24 hour booking records by name, date, or charge. This page covers how to find booking records in Oregon, what they contain, and where each county publishes them.

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Oregon 24 Hour Booking Quick Facts

36 Counties
Online Roster Access
Public Records Law
24/7 Booking Logs

Oregon 24 Hour Booking Search

Oregon keeps 24 hour booking records at the county level. Each county sheriff runs a jail and logs every arrest and booking. Some counties post a live jail roster on their website. Others update a list once or twice a day. A few smaller counties only share booking data by phone. The Oregon State Sheriff's Association represents all 36 elected sheriffs and can point you to the right office if you are not sure where to look for 24 hour booking records in Oregon.

Counties with online jail rosters let you search by name, booking date, or charge. Results show who is in custody right now. Large counties like Multnomah, Lane, and Jackson run searchable databases. Mid-size counties like Clatsop, Columbia, and Josephine also post booking rosters with search tools. Smaller rural counties may only list inmates on a static page or require a phone call to the jail for 24 hour booking details in Oregon.

Oregon State Sheriffs Association 24 hour booking resources

The Oregon State Police Criminal Justice Information Services division is the central repository for criminal offender data in the state. CJIS does not publish 24 hour booking rosters, but it holds the statewide criminal history database that booking records feed into. For current jail rosters and recent bookings, go to the county sheriff in Oregon.

How 24 Hour Booking Works in Oregon

When someone is arrested in Oregon, they are taken to the county jail for booking. Booking is the process of recording the arrest. A corrections deputy logs the person's name, date of birth, charges, and other details into the jail system. This creates the booking record. Most Oregon jails complete booking within a few hours of arrest. The 24 hour booking log shows all people processed in the last day.

Oregon Department of Corrections 24 hour booking offender search

The Oregon Department of Corrections Offender Search covers state prison inmates, not county jail bookings. For people held in county facilities, the sheriff's jail roster is the right source. The DOC system lets you search by SID number or name and shows custody status, facility, and other details for state inmates in Oregon. For county-level 24 hour booking records, always check the local sheriff.

Each booking record in Oregon typically includes the person's full name, date of birth, arrest date and time, charges filed, bail amount if set, booking number, and the arresting agency. Some counties also show a scheduled release date. Oregon House Bill 3273, effective January 1, 2022, changed how booking photos work. Law enforcement can no longer release booking photos to the public in most cases. Many counties removed mugshots from their online rosters after this law took effect.

Oregon Public Records Law and 24 Hour Booking

Booking records in Oregon are public records. Under ORS 192.314, every person has the right to inspect public records of a public body in Oregon. This includes jail booking logs held by county sheriffs. The law sets the default rule: records are open unless a specific exemption applies.

Oregon Revised Statutes ORS 192.314 public records law 24 hour booking

ORS 192.355 lists exemptions from disclosure. Some details in booking records may be redacted. Social Security numbers, medical information, and data that could risk someone's safety are exempt. Juvenile records are also protected. But the core booking facts like name, charges, and booking date are public in Oregon.

Oregon Revised Statutes ORS 192.355 exemptions 24 hour booking records

If a county denies your request for 24 hour booking records, you can petition the District Attorney under ORS 192.431. The Oregon Public Records Advocate also provides free dispute resolution. Either the requester or the public body can ask the advocate for help. The process must wrap up within 21 days.

Oregon Public Records Advocate 24 hour booking dispute help

How to Request 24 Hour Booking Records in Oregon

You can request booking records by visiting a county sheriff's office, calling the jail, or checking the online roster. Oregon law requires public bodies to acknowledge a records request within 5 business days and fulfill it or explain the delay within 10 more days. Written requests help create a paper trail. Most sheriffs accept requests by mail, email, or in person for 24 hour booking records in Oregon.

Oregon DOJ public records manual 24 hour booking request guidance

Fees vary by county. Some provide online roster access at no cost. Others charge for copies of records. Standard copy fees in Oregon are around $0.25 per page. Certified copies cost more. A few counties charge a flat fee for records searches. Contact the sheriff's office in the county where the booking took place to ask about their fee schedule for 24 hour booking records.

Oregon Court Records and Booking Data

A 24 hour booking record is not the same as a court record. Booking happens at the jail. Court records are created when the case moves to a judge. The Oregon Judicial Department provides online access to court calendars and case information through the Oregon eCourt Case Information system.

Oregon Judicial Department records and calendar search 24 hour booking

The Oregon Judicial Case Information Network, known as OJCIN, offers subscription access to circuit court records across all 36 counties. A setup fee of $150 applies. Free basic case searches are available through the Smart Search tool. You can look up a name or case number to see if charges from a booking led to a court case in Oregon. The free search shows case type, status, and filing dates.

Court records and 24 hour booking records serve different purposes. Booking records confirm an arrest happened. Court records show what the system did with the case after that. A booking does not mean a conviction. Many people who appear on a 24 hour booking roster are later released without charges or have their cases dismissed in Oregon.

Statewide 24 Hour Booking Resources

Oregon has several statewide tools for finding people in custody. The Victim Information System in Oregon (VISOR) sends notifications when an inmate's custody status changes. Crime victims can sign up for alerts about a specific person. VISOR covers both state prisons and county jails that participate in the system across Oregon.

VINE victim notification system Oregon 24 hour booking alerts

The Federal Bureau of Prisons Inmate Locator covers federal inmates held anywhere in the country. If someone was arrested by a federal agency in Oregon, they may be in federal custody rather than a county jail. The BOP locator lets you search by name or register number.

Federal Bureau of Prisons inmate locator Oregon 24 hour booking

The Oregon State Archives maintains historical public records including some older criminal justice records. For current 24 hour booking data, the county sheriff is the best source. The Archives can help with older records and research that goes beyond recent bookings in Oregon.

Oregon State Archives public records 24 hour booking history

Note: Criminal history record information held by CJIS is confidential under ORS 181A.220 and requires specific authority to access. Open record requests through OSP cost $33 per search and the subject is notified.

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Browse Oregon 24 Hour Booking by County

Each county in Oregon has its own jail and booking system. Pick a county below to find local jail roster links, contact info, and booking search tools.

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24 Hour Booking in Major Oregon Cities

City police departments make arrests, but booking happens at the county jail. Pick a city below to learn about 24 hour booking records and local police records access.

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