Orange County Arrest Records
Orange County recent bookings are processed at the county jail on South Border Street in Orange. The Sheriff's Office manages the jail and records every arrest from agencies across the county. Orange is the county seat, and the county sits on the Louisiana state line in Southeast Texas. Local law enforcement includes the Orange County Sheriff's Office, Orange Police Department, Bridge City PD, Vidor PD, and West Orange PD. All booking records are public under Texas law. You can find them through statewide databases, court portals, and by reaching out to the jail for the latest custody information.
Orange County Overview
Orange County Sheriff and Recent Bookings
The Orange County Sheriff's Office runs the jail and maintains all booking records. The jail is at 205 S. Border Street in Orange. Every arrest in the county comes through this facility. Multiple police departments operate in the county, so bookings come from several different agencies.
Orange County has a population of about 84,000. The county covers around 360 square miles along the Sabine River, which forms the Texas-Louisiana border. Beaumont and Port Arthur are close by in Jefferson County, and the whole region functions as part of the Golden Triangle metro area. Cross-border traffic between Texas and Louisiana is constant, and some arrests involve people from out of state.
Texas law allows warrantless arrests in specific situations. The Code of Criminal Procedure details when officers can make these arrests. After someone is taken into custody in Orange County, they go to the jail on Border Street. Under Article 15.17, the person must appear before a magistrate within 48 hours. The magistrate reads the charges and explains the person's rights, including the right to have a lawyer appointed if they cannot afford one.
| Office | Orange County Sheriff's Office |
|---|---|
| Jail Address |
205 S. Border Street Orange, TX 77630 |
| Phone | (409) 883-2612 |
| District Clerk | 801 W. Division Avenue, Orange, TX 77630 |
| Hours | Jail operates 24 hours, 7 days a week |
How to Search Orange County Recent Bookings
You can search for Orange County recent bookings using several tools. The re:SearchTX portal has court records from all Texas counties, including Orange. Search by name and filter to Orange County. Court records appear after charges are filed by the District Attorney, which may be a day or more after the booking itself.
For current jail status, call the Orange County jail at (409) 883-2612. Staff can confirm whether someone is in custody, share the charges, and tell you if bond has been set. This is the quickest method for recent arrests that have not yet shown up in online systems.
DPS Crime Records Service is another route. Their database holds arrest records reported by Orange County agencies. A name search costs $3.00. The system covers Class B misdemeanors and above. Agencies have to report arrests to DPS within seven days.
You can also file a public records request under the Texas Public Information Act. Government Code Chapter 552 gives you the right to request records from the Sheriff's Office in writing. Include the person's name and approximate arrest date. The office has 10 business days to respond, and standard copies cost about $0.10 per page.
Orange County and the Louisiana Border
Orange County sits right on the state line. The Sabine River separates Texas from Louisiana. Interstate 10 crosses the border here, and traffic between the two states is heavy. This geography matters for booking records because arrests sometimes involve people from Louisiana, and cross-jurisdictional issues can come up.
If someone is arrested in Orange County, Texas law applies regardless of where they live. The booking goes into the Orange County system. But if the arrest happened on the Louisiana side, you would need to check Calcasieu Parish records instead. Make sure you know which side of the border the arrest took place on before you start searching.
The proximity to Louisiana also means that some warrants cross state lines. Orange County may hold someone on a Louisiana warrant until extradition is handled, or the other way around. These cases show up in the booking record with a note about the out-of-state warrant. The Code of Criminal Procedure has provisions for interstate warrants and fugitive holds.
Orange County Recent Bookings Indigent Defense
The Texas Indigent Defense Commission monitors how counties like Orange County provide legal counsel to defendants who cannot afford their own attorney.
TIDC publishes data on appointed counsel rates, expenditures, and case outcomes by county. Orange County reports to TIDC each year, and the data helps track how well the county meets its obligation to provide defense for qualifying defendants.
Orange County Recent Bookings Process
The booking process at the Orange County jail follows a set pattern. The arresting officer brings the person in and hands over arrest paperwork. Jail staff records the person's name, date of birth, address, and physical description. Fingerprints are taken and submitted to DPS for the statewide criminal history system.
A booking photo is taken. Charges are entered into the system with the matching Texas Penal Code sections. Staff checks for outstanding warrants from other jurisdictions, including Louisiana given the county's location. Personal property is cataloged and stored until the person is released.
The magistrate hearing comes next. Bond is set based on factors from Article 17.15 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. The judge looks at the charge severity, whether the person is a flight risk, their ties to the community, and their financial means. Common charges in Orange County include DWI, drug offenses, theft, assault, and warrant pickups. The I-10 corridor brings through-traffic arrests as well, particularly drug-related stops.
Public Records and Recent Bookings in Orange County
Orange County booking records are open to the public. The Texas Public Information Act under Government Code Chapter 552 makes this the default. Records held by a government body are presumed public unless an exemption covers them. Basic booking data like name, charges, bond amount, and booking date is not typically exempt.
Send a written request to the Orange County Sheriff's Office if you need records not available through online search tools. Be clear about what you want. Include the person's name and arrest date if you know it. The office must respond within 10 business days. Page copies cost about $0.10.
Some information can be withheld. Section 552.108 protects details that could compromise an active investigation. Juvenile booking records are sealed. But for adults, the basic booking data stays open. Any denial must go through the Attorney General for review. The Sheriff's Office has to cite a specific exemption and get the AG's approval before they can refuse a request.
Legal Help in Orange County
People booked into the Orange County jail have the right to counsel. The Texas Indigent Defense Commission oversees how counties provide lawyers for those who cannot pay. Orange County judges appoint attorneys from a qualified list at the magistrate hearing for eligible defendants.
Lone Star Legal Aid serves the Southeast Texas region, including Orange County. They can help with some legal matters and refer you to other services. The State Bar of Texas referral line at (800) 252-9690 connects you with private attorneys. The Texas Commission on Jail Standards monitors the Orange County jail and publishes reports on conditions, staffing, and population.
The District Clerk's office at 801 W. Division Avenue in Orange keeps all court case files. If you need copies of filings, motions, or court orders related to a booking, that is where to go. The clerk can also tell you which court a case was assigned to and its current status.
Statewide Tools for Orange County Searches
State-level databases cover Orange County records alongside every other Texas county. The TDCJ offender search shows people convicted in Orange County who are now in state prison. You need a last name and first initial to run a search. Results include current facility, offense, sentence, and release date.
The re:SearchTX portal has the most complete set of court filings for Orange County. Criminal cases, civil matters, and family law filings all show up here. DPS maintains the Computerized Criminal History system, which includes arrests reported by every agency in Orange County. Any booking for a Class B misdemeanor or above gets sent to this statewide database.
Cities in Orange County
Orange County has several communities, but none have a population above the major city threshold. All arrests in the county are processed at the county jail on South Border Street in Orange.
The city of Orange is the county seat. Other communities include Vidor, Bridge City, West Orange, and Pinehurst. Each has its own police department, but all bookings go through the Orange County Sheriff's Office jail.
Nearby Counties
Orange County borders Louisiana to the east and several Texas counties to the west and north. If you need to search for bookings in neighboring areas, check these counties.