Search Harrison County Recent Bookings

All recent bookings in Harrison County go through the sheriff's office jail in Marshall. Local police, deputies, and troopers bring arrested individuals to this one facility for processing. Harrison County is an East Texas county with a moderate population where the sheriff in Marshall manages the county jail and all booking operations. Below you will find details on searching for booking records, the steps that follow an arrest, court records access, and legal resources available in Harrison County.

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Harrison County Booking Overview

67K+ Population
Marshall County Seat
East TX Region
71st Judicial District

The Process After Harrison County Recent Bookings

Under the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, a magistrate must see every person booked into the Harrison County Jail within 48 hours. The magistrate confirms the charges, determines probable cause, and sets a bond amount. This step also triggers the right to an attorney.

Three types of bond exist in Texas. Cash bond requires paying the full amount. Surety bond uses a bail bondsman who charges a fee and covers the rest. Personal recognizance bond means no money is needed, just a signed promise to appear. The bond type and amount depend on the severity of the charge, the person's prior record, and the judge's view of flight risk. Violent felonies and repeat offenses typically result in higher bonds.

Harrison County sits within the 71st Judicial District. Felony cases go to district court. Misdemeanors are handled in county court. Once the prosecutor files formal charges, the case transitions from a booking record to a court case. All subsequent filings, motions, and dispositions are tracked by the clerk's office and become part of the public court record.

Finding Court Records for Harrison County Recent Bookings

Booking records show the arrest. Court records show everything after. In Harrison County, the clerk's office in Marshall maintains all criminal and civil case files. You can request searches by name or by case number during regular business hours.

re:SearchTX is the statewide free court records tool. Managed by the Texas judicial branch, it covers cases from all 254 counties. You search by name and get back results showing case numbers, charges, filing dates, and dispositions. It is not the full case jacket, but it gives you enough to know the status and outcome of a case without leaving home.

The Texas Penal Code classification chart shown below outlines how offenses are categorized and what penalties apply at each level.

Harrison County recent bookings texas penal code offense classification details

The Texas Penal Code Chapter 12 sets out the punishment ranges for each class of felony and misdemeanor offense.

How to Get Harrison County Booking Records

Anyone can request booking records from the Harrison County Sheriff's Office under the Texas Public Information Act. The law is clear. You do not need a reason. Submit a written request to the office in Marshall with the person's name and arrest date.

The office must respond within 10 business days. Fees are set by the state: $0.10 per page for regular copies and $1.00 for certified copies. Large requests may require a cost estimate upfront. Basic booking data like name, charges, arrest date, and bond is public. Section 552.108 of the Government Code does allow agencies to withhold some law enforcement details, but only if disclosure would harm an ongoing investigation. Even then, the agency must get a ruling from the attorney general before it can deny the request.

Harrison County Recent Bookings Charge Types

Charges in Harrison County booking records follow the Texas Penal Code classification system. Each charge is tied to a specific statute section and penalty range.

Felony offenses are divided into four categories. First degree felonies carry 5 to 99 years in prison. Second degree means 2 to 20 years. Third degree is 2 to 10 years. State jail felonies bring 180 days to 2 years. Fines up to $10,000 can be added at any felony level. Misdemeanors have three classes. Class A is up to a year in jail and $4,000 in fines. Class B is up to 180 days and $2,000. Class C offenses are fine-only at $500 maximum and rarely result in a booking.

The most common charges in Harrison County bookings tend to be DWI, drug possession, theft, assault, and failure to appear on outstanding warrants. Every booking record lists the Penal Code section for each charge, making it straightforward to verify the offense and penalty range.

Oversight of the Harrison County Jail

The Texas Commission on Jail Standards inspects the Harrison County Jail on a regular basis. TCJS reviews booking procedures, housing, medical care, staffing, and records management. If something does not meet standards, the commission requires the jail to fix it. Inspection reports are public and available from TCJS.

The sheriff's duty to operate the jail comes from the Local Government Code Chapter 201. That law requires the sheriff to maintain accurate custody and booking records. When you combine that obligation with the transparency rules in the Public Information Act, you get a system where records are well maintained and open to the public. This is true in Harrison County just as it is in every other Texas county.

The Texas Commission on Jail Standards portal shown below provides inspection reports and compliance data for county jails across the state.

Harrison County recent bookings texas commission on jail standards oversight portal

The Texas Commission on Jail Standards publishes inspection outcomes and ensures all county jails meet minimum operational standards.

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Nearby Counties

These counties border Harrison County. Each has its own jail and booking system. Make sure you check where the arrest took place to find the right county records.