Navarro County Recent Bookings Search

Navarro County recent bookings are handled at the county jail in Corsicana, which sits about 55 miles south of Dallas along Interstate 45. The Sheriff's Office processes all arrests from local police departments, highway patrol stops, and warrant pickups across the county. Booking records include the person's name, date of birth, charges, bond amount, and arrest date. These records are public under Texas law. This page walks through the tools and steps for finding recent booking data in Navarro County, along with court records and legal aid options that connect to the booking process.

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Navarro County Booking Overview

50K+ Population
Corsicana County Seat
Central TX Region
13th Judicial District

What Happens After Recent Bookings in Navarro County

After booking, the person must see a magistrate within 48 hours. That rule comes from the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. The magistrate reviews probable cause, reads the charges, and sets bail. This hearing also triggers the right to a lawyer. If the person cannot pay for one, the court will appoint an attorney.

Bond types in Navarro County work the same as the rest of Texas. A cash bond means paying the full amount to the court. A surety bond goes through a bail bondsman who charges around 10% of the total and posts the rest. Personal recognizance bonds let the person go on their word alone, with no money put up. The judge looks at the charge, the person's criminal history, ties to the community, and flight risk before deciding what kind of bond fits. Serious charges usually mean higher bonds. Capital murder charges can result in no bond at all.

Navarro County uses district courts for felonies and county courts at law for misdemeanors. Once the district attorney files formal charges, the case moves from the jail's booking system into the court records system. The District Clerk then tracks all hearings, filings, motions, and final outcomes.

Navarro County Court Records and Recent Bookings

Booking records show the arrest. Court records show what came after. The Navarro County District Clerk in Corsicana keeps all criminal case files, including felony and misdemeanor cases. You can search by defendant name or case number at the clerk's office during business hours.

For remote access, re:SearchTX is the best free tool. It covers every county in Texas and pulls data from the e-filing system. You type a name, and it returns matching cases with dates, charges, case status, and how the case ended. It does not replace the full file at the clerk's office, but it gives you the important details without a trip to the courthouse.

The Texas Judicial Branch maintains the re:SearchTX system and updates it as courts process new filings.

Navarro County recent bookings Texas Judicial Branch court records system

You can also explore case data through the Texas Judicial Branch website, which links to multiple search tools and court resources across the state.

If someone booked in Navarro County ends up convicted and sent to state prison, the TDCJ offender search tracks them from that point forward. It shows current unit location, offense details, and projected release date. That is a separate system from the county jail records but picks up where the county leaves off.

Requesting Navarro County Booking Records

The Texas Public Information Act lets anyone request copies of booking records from the Navarro County Sheriff's Office. You do not have to say why. Send a written request with the person's name and approximate arrest date. Include any other details you have, like date of birth or case number. The agency has 10 business days to respond.

Copy fees follow state rules. Standard copies run $0.10 per page. Certified copies cost $1.00 per page. If the request is large, the office may send a cost estimate before doing the work. Under Section 552.108 of the Government Code, some records tied to active investigations can be held back. But basic booking data like name, charges, arrest date, and bond is almost always released. If the agency wants to withhold something, it must ask the attorney general for a ruling first. That process takes time and is rare for routine booking requests.

Recent Bookings Charge Types in Navarro County

Navarro County bookings reflect a mix of offenses typical for a mid-size Texas county along a major highway corridor. DWI arrests, drug possession, theft, assault, and outstanding warrants make up most of the activity. The Texas Penal Code sets the offense categories and penalty ranges that apply to every booking.

Texas felonies break down into classes. First degree carries 5 to 99 years or life. Second degree means 2 to 20 years. Third degree is 2 to 10 years. State jail felonies run 180 days to 2 years. Fines can go up to $10,000 for any felony. On the misdemeanor side, Class A is up to one year in jail and a $4,000 fine. Class B tops out at 180 days and $2,000. Class C is fine-only, with a max of $500, and those rarely result in jail bookings since there is no custody involved.

The I-45 corridor through Navarro County sees regular traffic enforcement. That means more DWI stops and drug seizures than you might expect for a county of this size. Law enforcement presence along the highway keeps the booking numbers steady.

Navarro County Jail Standards and Oversight

Every county jail in Texas answers to the Texas Commission on Jail Standards. TCJS inspects the Navarro County Jail for compliance with state rules on intake procedures, housing, medical care, staffing, and record keeping. Inspection results are public. If the jail fails to meet standards, TCJS requires corrective action before the next review cycle. Good intake procedures mean the booking data in the system is accurate and reliable from the start.

The Local Government Code gives the sheriff the duty of running the jail and keeping custody records. This works hand in hand with the Public Information Act. One law requires the sheriff to maintain the records. The other says the public can access them. The result is a system where booking data is both well kept and open for anyone to request.

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Nearby Counties

These counties border Navarro County. Each has its own jail and booking process. Make sure you know where the arrest took place to search the right county.