Springfield 24 Hour Booking

Springfield is a city in Lane County with about 63,000 residents. It sits next to Eugene along the Willamette River. When Springfield police arrest someone, the person is booked at the Lane County Jail in Eugene. The jail runs around the clock, handling intakes at any hour. Springfield 24 hour booking records are public under Oregon law. This page covers how to access arrest records, police reports, and booking data from Springfield and Lane County.

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Springfield Quick Facts

~63,000 Population
Lane County
123 Department Members
541-726-3748 Municipal Court

Springfield Police Department

The Springfield Police Department is a full-service law enforcement agency. It has 123 members. That number includes sworn officers, community service officers, corrections officers, and dispatchers. The department handles all police work in the city. Officers patrol day and night. They respond to calls, investigate crimes, and make arrests.

When a Springfield officer arrests someone, the person is not held at a city jail. Instead, the officer transports the person to the Lane County Jail at 101 W 5th Ave in Eugene. The county jail handles all booking. This means the booking record is a county document. The arrest report stays with the Springfield police as a city record.

Learn more about the department on the Springfield Police website.

Springfield Police Department website with department overview and services

The department serves a mid-size city with a wide range of needs. Springfield sits in a busy part of the Willamette Valley. Traffic, property crime, and community safety are daily concerns. Each incident can create records that the public has a right to see under ORS 192.314.

Springfield Police Records

The police records unit receives, maintains, and routes all department records. This is the central hub for report files, data entry, and records storage. If you need a copy of a police report from Springfield, the records unit is where to start.

The unit is open for service from 6 AM to 1 AM. A price list for copies is available. Fees cover the cost of staff time and materials. The amount depends on the type and size of your request. Simple requests may cost just a few dollars. Larger requests with many pages may cost more.

Visit the Springfield Police Records page for hours, fees, and contact details.

Springfield Police Records page showing service hours and copy fees

Under ORS 192.314, every person has the right to inspect public records of a public body. The Springfield police records unit follows this law. When you ask for records, the unit will check if any exemptions under ORS 192.355 apply. If the records are open, they will provide copies. If parts are exempt, they will explain why.

Springfield Public Records Requests

To get police records from Springfield, you need to fill out a public records request form. The form asks you to identify the type of records you need. Be specific. Give names, dates, and any case numbers you have. This helps staff find your records without delay.

Oregon law says the purpose of your request may matter in some cases. When records have a conditional exemption under ORS 192.355, the agency must weigh the public interest in disclosure against the interest in keeping the records private. Your stated purpose can affect that balance. For most standard booking and arrest records, this step does not come into play. But for records tied to active cases or sensitive matters, it may be a factor.

The city also has a general public records process through the City Recorder at 225 Fifth Street in Springfield. For police-specific records, use the police department form.

Springfield Police public records request page with form and instructions

The form is straightforward. Fill it out and submit it to the department. Staff will review your request and respond. Under Oregon law, agencies must act on requests within a reasonable time. If there will be a delay, they must tell you.

24 Hour Booking at Lane County Jail

The Lane County Jail is at 101 W 5th Ave in Eugene. You can call them at 541-682-4263. The jail runs 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. All Springfield arrests that result in jail time lead to a booking at this facility. The jail staff record the intake data. This includes the name, charges, booking time, and arresting agency.

For Springfield arrests, the arresting agency on the booking record will show the Springfield Police Department. This helps you identify which bookings came from Springfield versus Eugene or other Lane County agencies. The county keeps these records and makes them available under Oregon public records law.

For more on Lane County booking records and public records tools, visit the county page.

View Lane County 24 Hour Booking

Springfield 24 Hour Booking and the Law

ORS 192.314 creates the public right to inspect records. This applies to all public bodies in Oregon, including the Springfield Police Department and the Lane County Jail. When you ask for booking or arrest records, both agencies must respond under this law.

ORS 192.355 lists the exemptions. Some common ones that apply to police records include active investigation files, personal safety information, and juvenile records. The basic facts of a booking are almost never exempt. The name, charges, date of arrest, and arresting agency are standard public data. Springfield and Lane County both follow these rules when they handle records requests.

If your request is denied, ask for a written explanation. The agency must cite the specific exemption. You can challenge a denial through the Oregon Attorney General. This process exists to protect access while allowing agencies to shield information that truly needs protection.

Springfield 24 Hour Booking Court Records

Springfield has a municipal court that handles city-level cases. These include traffic violations, minor offenses, and city code matters. The court phone number is 541-726-3748. Court records are separate from police records and booking records. If you need information about a court case, contact the court directly.

Court records are also public under ORS 192.314, with some exceptions. The court may withhold records that are sealed or that involve protected parties. For standard case files, you can ask for copies by contacting the court clerk. Include the case number if you have it. The court can also tell you the status of a pending case.

How to Search Springfield 24 Hour Booking Data

Here is a quick guide to finding the records you need. Each type of record has a different source. Knowing where to look saves time and effort.

  • Booking records: Contact Lane County Jail at 541-682-4263 or check county online tools
  • Police reports: Submit a request through the Springfield public records form
  • Court records: Call Springfield Municipal Court at 541-726-3748
  • General city records: Visit the City Recorder at 225 Fifth Street

Start with the Lane County Jail for recent bookings. Their records show who is currently in custody and recent intakes. For the police report behind an arrest, go through the Springfield police records unit. For court outcomes, contact the municipal court. Each piece fills in a different part of the picture.

Springfield 24 Hour Booking and Lane County

Springfield and Eugene share Lane County. Together they form the second largest metro area in Oregon. The two cities sit side by side. Lane County also includes rural areas that stretch from the coast to the Cascades. The county jail serves all of these areas.

Springfield police work closely with other agencies in the region. The Lane County Sheriff, Eugene police, and Oregon State Police all operate nearby. When multiple agencies respond to an incident, records may exist in more than one system. If you are looking for booking data from a Springfield arrest, the county jail is always the place to check. The police report will be with Springfield. But if state police or the sheriff were involved, they may have records too.

The city has grown over the past decade. More people bring more activity. The police department handles thousands of calls each year. Many of those calls produce records. Under ORS 192.314, you have the right to inspect those records. The tools and contacts on this page help you exercise that right.

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Lane County Booking Records

Springfield is in Lane County. All jail bookings for Springfield arrests go through the Lane County Jail in Eugene. For a complete guide to Lane County booking records, inmate data, and public records access, visit the county page below.

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