Access Strongsville 72 Hour Booking

Strongsville 72 hour booking records are available through the local police department and the Cuyahoga County jail system. With 68 officers on staff, the Strongsville Police handle arrests in this suburb south of Cleveland. Anyone booked here ends up at the Cuyahoga County Corrections Center, which processes over 26,000 inmates each year. You can search for booking records through the police department or the county sheriff. Ohio's public records law gives you the right to ask for these files at any time.

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Strongsville Booking Facts

68 Officers
Cuyahoga County County
26,000+ County Inmates/Year
Low Crime 35% Below Ohio Avg

Cuyahoga County Processes Strongsville Bookings

All people arrested in Strongsville go to the Cuyahoga County Corrections Center for booking and holding. The Cuyahoga County Sheriff's Office runs the jail, which has two locations. The main facility is downtown, and a second one is in Euclid. Together they handle more than 26,000 inmates per year with a staff of about 700 correction officers.

The county posts inmate information on its website. You can search by name to find current inmates and see their charges, bond info, and booking date. This data comes from the 72 hour booking process. When someone gets arrested in Strongsville, they show up in the county system once they arrive at the corrections center. The county also keeps a Most Wanted list that you can browse.

Strongsville Police 72 Hour Booking

The Strongsville Police Department is led by Chief Mark Fender. The station sits at 18688 Royalton Road, Strongsville, OH 44136. You can call them at 440-238-7373. The department has patrol and investigations divisions. They also offer drug addiction resources, DARE programs, a victim advocate, and Safety Town for kids.

For 72 hour booking records, contact the police department directly. Strongsville has a crime rate that sits 35% lower than the Ohio average. That means fewer bookings per capita compared to many other cities. Still, arrests do happen, and the records are public. You can get them by asking the department under ORC § 149.43. No form is needed. No reason is needed. Just ask and the office has to respond.

Strongsville Mayor's Court

Strongsville has a Mayor's Court that handles minor offenses like traffic tickets and low-level misdemeanors. Cases that start with a booking at the police station may end up here if the charges are minor. More serious cases go to Cuyahoga County courts instead.

The Mayor's Court is separate from the county court system. Records from this court are kept locally. If you are looking for the outcome of a case that started with a Strongsville arrest, check both the Mayor's Court and the county clerk of courts depending on the severity of the charges.

Note: Mayor's Court records and booking records are kept by different offices, so you may need to contact both to get the full picture.

Visiting Inmates After Strongsville Booking

Cuyahoga County allows weekly visits for inmates. All visits use a video recording system. You can visit on-site at the jail using kiosks, or you can use your own smartphone or laptop from home. The system runs through Securus Technologies. You need to create an account first and then schedule your time.

This is the same setup for anyone booked through any city in Cuyahoga County, not just Strongsville. The jail also provides medical and mental health services, educational programs, GED classes, work release options, and substance abuse treatment. These are not part of the booking record, but they matter if you are tracking what happens after someone gets processed into the system.

Ohio Law on 72 Hour Booking Records

Ohio treats booking records as public records. Under the Public Records Act, anyone can ask for a copy. The Strongsville Police must make the record available in a reasonable time. They cannot charge for the time it takes to find the file. Copy fees are allowed but capped at a fair rate.

The arrest itself must follow state law. ORC § 2935.03 covers when an officer can arrest someone. For felonies, probable cause is enough. Misdemeanors typically need a warrant. Once the arrest is made, the booking record is created. Under ORC § 5120.21, the state also manages inmate records at the prison level. The Sunshine Laws Manual from the Ohio Attorney General breaks down all of these rules.

Statewide Search Tools

Beyond Strongsville and Cuyahoga County, you can search statewide databases. The ODRC Offender Search covers people in state prisons. The VINELink system sends you alerts about custody changes. And the Bureau of Criminal Investigation handles background checks through WebCheck.

Strongsville 72 Hour Booking Resources

Below is the Strongsville Police Department website where you can find contact info for records requests.

Strongsville Police Department 72 hour booking records

The department site lists phone numbers, division info, and links to community programs.

This screenshot shows the Strongsville Mayor's Court page that covers local court proceedings for minor offenses.

Strongsville Mayor's Court 72 hour booking cases

Minor charges from a Strongsville arrest may be handled through this court rather than the county system.

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Cuyahoga County 72 Hour Booking

See the full Cuyahoga County 72 Hour Booking page for more on the county jail, inmate roster, and records access across the entire county.

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