Clinton County 72 Hour Booking

Clinton County 72 hour booking records come from the sheriff's office in Wilmington, Ohio. The jail keeps logs for all arrests made in the county, and you can get these records by visiting the office or calling in a request. Clinton County runs a digital mail system for inmates, which is one of the few counties in Ohio that no longer takes physical letters. Booking data includes the name, charge, date, and physical details of the person brought in. You can also track custody changes through the statewide VINE notification system.

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Clinton County Booking Stats

42,000 Population
Wilmington County Seat
12th Judicial Circuit
Digital Only Mail System

Clinton County Sheriff's Office Records

The Clinton County Sheriff's Office handles all 72 hour booking records for the county. The office sits in Wilmington and serves as the main hub for arrest reports, jail logs, and inmate data. You can call them to ask about a recent booking or go in person during business hours. Staff will pull the records you need and provide copies on the spot in most cases.

Ohio law gives you the right to see these records. Under ORC 149.43, all public records must be made available on request. You do not need to give a reason. The sheriff's office has to respond in a timely way. If they turn down a request, they must cite the specific law that lets them withhold it. Most 72 hour booking records are fully public, showing the name, charge, date, and booking number for each person brought into the Clinton County Jail.

Copies cost a small fee per page. The exact price depends on the format you need.

72 Hour Booking and Digital Mail

Clinton County Jail switched to a digital mail system in recent years. No physical personal mail goes to inmates any more. All letters have to be sent through an approved digital mail provider. The provider scans the mail and delivers it to the inmate on a tablet or kiosk inside the jail. This change was made for security reasons, and it affects how families stay in touch with people who are booked in.

The 72 hour booking process still works the same way. When someone gets arrested in Clinton County, they go through intake at the jail. Staff take a photo, log the charges, and create a booking record. That record becomes public once the process is done. Medical and mental health screenings happen during the first hours of custody. The jail provides these services to all incoming inmates no matter what the charge is.

Clinton County Court Records

The Clinton County Clerk of Courts keeps all case files in Wilmington. Court records are separate from booking records. A booking record shows who was brought in and when. A court record shows what happened with the case after that. If you need to know the outcome of a charge, the clerk's office is where you go.

You can search for cases by name or case number. The clerk handles both civil and criminal files. For 72 hour booking data that ties to a specific court case, you may need to check both the sheriff's office and the clerk. The two offices work on different parts of the same process. One handles the arrest and intake. The other tracks the legal proceedings from start to finish.

Note: Court records and booking records come from different offices, so check both if you need the full picture on a case.

Custody Alerts for Clinton County

The VINELink system tracks inmates across Ohio, including Clinton County. You can sign up for alerts on any person in custody. VINE sends a call, email, or text when the status changes. This might mean a release, a transfer, or an escape. The system is free to use and runs around the clock.

Under ORC 5120.21, the state manages inmate record disclosure for prisons. County jails like Clinton County work with VINE for local updates. If someone gets moved from the county jail to a state facility, the ODRC Offender Search tool picks up from there. Between VINELink and the ODRC database, you can follow someone through the Ohio system from booking to release.

72 Hour Booking and Arrest Law

Ohio law sets clear rules for how arrests work in Clinton County. Under ORC 2935.03, an officer can arrest someone without a warrant for a felony if there is probable cause. Misdemeanor arrests usually need a warrant unless the officer sees the crime take place. Once the arrest happens, the person goes to the Clinton County Jail for the 72 hour booking process.

Warrants go through the court system. A sworn complaint must show probable cause before a judge signs off. The warrant names the person and lists the charge. Any officer with jurisdiction can serve it. The Bureau of Criminal Investigation keeps statewide criminal records if you need to look beyond just Clinton County. The Sunshine Laws Manual from the Attorney General also explains your rights when it comes to getting public records.

Clinton County 72 Hour Booking Resources

Below is the ODRC Offender Search portal, which covers state-level inmate records for anyone transferred out of Clinton County.

Clinton County 72 hour booking ODRC offender search

Use this tool to look up anyone who has been moved from the Clinton County Jail to a state prison facility. The database is updated regularly and free to use.

The screenshot below shows the VINELink notification system used across Ohio.

Clinton County 72 hour booking VINELink notification system

VINE lets you track custody changes for anyone booked into the Clinton County Jail or any other Ohio facility.

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Nearby Counties

These counties border Clinton County and maintain their own 72 hour booking records.

Cities in Clinton County

Clinton County does not have any cities that meet the population threshold for a separate page. Wilmington is the county seat and largest community, but 72 hour booking records for the entire county go through the sheriff's office listed above.