Search Knox County Recent Bookings
Knox County recent bookings are handled by the Sheriff's Office in Benjamin, a small plains community in northwest Texas. The county has about 3,500 residents spread across farming and ranching land. Munday is the largest town, but Benjamin serves as the county seat. The jail processes a low volume of bookings, and some detainees get transferred to neighboring counties. All booking records are public. This page explains how to access them and understand the court process in Knox County.
Benjamin is one of the smallest county seats in Texas. Munday and Knox City have more residents but no separate jail. Knox County is part of the 50th Judicial District. Agriculture drives the economy, and most arrests involve misdemeanor offenses.
Knox County Booking Overview
How to Search Knox County Recent Bookings
The Knox County Sheriff's Office is the main agency for processing all bookings in the county. When someone gets arrested anywhere in Knox County, they go through the intake process at the jail in Benjamin. Deputies record the person's name, date of birth, charges, and arresting agency. They take fingerprints and a photograph. Once that data is logged into the system, it becomes a public record.
You can contact the Sheriff's Office to ask about a specific booking. Call them during business hours and provide the person's name and approximate arrest date. For an online search, the re:SearchTX portal lets you look up court cases from Knox County and every other county in the state. The booking record itself stays with the Sheriff's Office, but once the case enters the court system, it shows up in re:SearchTX with charges, case status, and hearing dates.
All booking data is public under the Texas Public Information Act, which is Government Code Chapter 552. You do not need a reason to request the information. Anyone can ask for it.
Note: New bookings may take several hours to appear in online systems. For the most current custody status, contact the Knox County jail directly in Benjamin.
What Happens After a Booking in Knox County
Every person booked into the Knox County jail must see a magistrate within 48 hours. The Texas Code of Criminal Procedure requires this. At the hearing, the magistrate reviews the charges, confirms probable cause, and sets bond. The defendant also learns about their right to an attorney at this point.
Bond works the same way across Texas. A cash bond means you pay the full amount. A surety bond goes through a bail bondsman who charges a fee, usually 10%, and covers the rest. Personal recognizance bonds let the defendant leave on a signed promise to return for court. The judge decides which type based on the charge, the person's criminal history, and whether they pose a flight risk. Serious felonies get higher bonds. Some charges can result in no bond at all.
Knox County is part of the 50th Judicial District. Felony cases go to the district court. Misdemeanors are handled by the county court. Once the prosecutor files charges, the case moves from the jail's records into the court system managed by the Knox County District Clerk.
Court Records Tied to Knox County Arrests
Booking records show the arrest. Court records show what came after. The Knox County District Clerk keeps all criminal case files, including charges, hearing dates, plea records, and final dispositions. You can search by name or case number. The clerk's office is in the Knox County Courthouse in Benjamin.
For remote access, re:SearchTX is the best free tool. It is run by the Texas Judicial Branch and covers every county in the state. Type in a name and you get back matching cases with dates, charges, and case status. It pulls from the same e-filing system the courts use. It does not replace the full case file at the clerk's office, but it gives you the key information without a trip to Benjamin.
The Texas Department of State Health Services portal is shown below, relevant to vital records that may connect to Knox County cases.
The TDCJ inmate search lets you check whether someone booked in Knox County was later transferred to a state prison facility.
Open Records Requests for Knox County Bookings
The Texas Public Information Act gives everyone the right to request copies of booking records, arrest reports, and incident reports from the Knox County Sheriff's Office. You do not have to give a reason. Submit your request by mail, in person, or through whatever process the agency has set up. Include the person's name, approximate date of arrest, and any other identifying details you have. The agency has 10 business days to respond.
Standard copies cost $0.10 per page under state guidelines. Certified copies run $1.00 per page. If your request is large, the office may send a cost estimate before producing the records. Under Section 552.108 of the Government Code, some records tied to active investigations can be withheld. But basic booking data like name, charges, arrest date, and bond is almost always released. The law leans toward disclosure. If the sheriff wants to hold something back, the office must get a ruling from the attorney general first.
Common Charges in Knox County Recent Bookings
Bookings in Knox County reflect the types of offenses common in the West TX region. DWI, drug possession, assault, theft, and outstanding warrants make up the bulk of arrests. Each booking record lists the specific charge with the statute section from the Texas Penal Code.
Texas classifies crimes into clear categories. First-degree felonies carry 5 to 99 years. Second degree is 2 to 20 years. Third degree is 2 to 10 years. State jail felonies mean 180 days to 2 years. All felonies can include fines up to $10,000. On the misdemeanor side, Class A is up to one year in jail and a $4,000 fine. Class B is up to 180 days and $2,000. Class C is fine only, up to $500. You rarely see Class C bookings because those offenses do not carry jail time.
The booking record shows the charge level at the time of arrest. Charges can change later. The prosecutor may add counts, reduce the level, or dismiss certain charges. The court record will show the final outcome. The booking record shows the starting point.
Jail Oversight in Knox County
The Texas Commission on Jail Standards inspects the Knox County detention facility. TCJS checks everything from intake procedures to medical care, staffing levels, and record keeping. Inspection reports are public. If a jail fails to meet standards, the commission requires corrective action. These inspections help ensure that booking data is recorded properly from the moment someone enters custody.
Under the Local Government Code, the sheriff is responsible for operating the jail and maintaining custody records. This legal duty works alongside the Public Information Act. One law says the sheriff must keep the records. The other says the public can access them. Together, they create a system where booking data is both maintained and available to anyone who asks for it.
Legal Help in Knox County
Anyone booked into the Knox County jail who cannot afford a lawyer can request a court-appointed attorney. The right starts at the magistrate hearing. Defendants fill out a financial affidavit, and the judge decides if they qualify. If they do, an attorney gets assigned from a list of lawyers who take appointed cases. The Texas Indigent Defense Commission tracks how each county handles these appointments, including response times and spending.
Knox County handles indigent defense through the 50th Judicial District court system. The county sets its own plan for how cases get assigned, but the state monitors the process. If you or someone you know gets booked and needs a lawyer, ask the magistrate about appointed counsel at the first hearing.
- Knox County court-appointed attorneys for qualifying defendants
- State Bar of Texas lawyer referral line at (800) 252-9690
- Texas RioGrande Legal Aid or Legal Aid of NorthWest Texas depending on the region
- Knox County District Clerk's office in Benjamin for case information
- The Texas Courts website for statewide court directories and self-help resources
Nearby Counties
These counties border Knox County. Each one runs its own jail and booking system. Make sure you know where the arrest took place to search the right county.