Perry County Booking and Arrest Data

Perry County is a rural county in central Pennsylvania. The county seat is New Bloomfield. With a small population, the county processes fewer arrests than its larger neighbors. But the same 72 hour booking rules apply here as they do across all of Pennsylvania. The sheriff and the prison both play a part in how booking records are created and stored. State tools and local offices give you several ways to search for Perry County arrest data and criminal case records.

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Perry County Sheriff 72 Hour Booking Role

The Perry County Sheriff's Office handles warrant service, courthouse safety, and prisoner transport. The sheriff works with local police and state troopers on arrests across the county. When someone is picked up on a warrant, the sheriff may be the one to bring them in for booking at the Perry County Prison.

Call the sheriff at 717-582-2133. Staff can tell you about active warrants and recent arrests. The office is in the county courthouse in New Bloomfield. You can visit in person during business hours to ask about booking records or to submit a written request for records.

The Perry County Sheriff's website also includes the ISOMS Inmate Portal. This tool lets you search for people who are currently in custody at the Perry County Prison. It pulls live data from the jail management system. You can find it through the sheriff's page on the county website.

Note: The ISOMS portal shows current inmates only. If someone has been released or transferred, they will not show up. For past booking records, call the prison or file a Right-to-Know request.

Perry County Prison and Booking Intake

The Perry County Prison is where all bookings take place. When police arrest someone in Perry County, they bring the person here. The prison staff log the person's name, charges, and personal details. This creates the intake record. The 72 hour clock starts at the time of arrest, not at the time of booking.

Call the prison at 717-582-4620. Staff can confirm if someone is in custody. They can share the charges on file and the bail amount. The phone line is the quickest way to check on a person held at the Perry County Prison.

Perry County is small. The prison does not hold a large number of people at any given time. But every arrest goes through the same intake steps. The booking record captures the same data points whether it is a minor charge or a serious crime. Each record ties to the 72 hour window between arrest and arraignment.

Perry County 72 Hour Booking and Arraignment

State law requires that a person arrested in Perry County see a judge within 72 hours. A magisterial district judge handles the preliminary arraignment. The judge reviews the charges, sets bail, and explains the case. Most arraignments in Perry County happen well before the 72 hour mark.

The booking record spans the time from arrest through arraignment. It captures the charges at intake, the bail decision, and the personal data logged at the prison. After the arraignment, the case moves into the court system. The booking record stays on file with Perry County.

Small counties like Perry tend to move fast. An arrest on a weekday morning will often lead to an arraignment that same day. Weekend arrests may take a bit more time. But on-call judges handle after-hours cases so the 72 hour rule is met.

Court Records from Perry County Bookings

The UJS Portal at ujsportal.pacourts.us covers Perry County court records. Search by name or case number to find criminal cases that started with a booking. The portal is free and needs no account. It shows charges, hearing dates, and outcomes.

Pennsylvania court records portal for searching Perry County 72 hour booking cases

When someone is booked at the Perry County Prison and charges are filed, the case enters the court system. It starts with the preliminary arraignment. If the case moves past the preliminary hearing, it goes to the Court of Common Pleas. The UJS Portal tracks every step from start to finish.

You can follow a Perry County case from the booking all the way through trial and sentencing. The portal updates as events happen. Check back to see the latest status on any case tied to a Perry County arrest.

Perry County Criminal Background Checks

The PATCH system at epatch.state.pa.us runs statewide criminal checks. If someone was booked in Perry County and the case led to a conviction, PATCH will show it. Pending charges may also appear. The system covers all 67 counties in Pennsylvania.

A PATCH search costs a small fee. Results come back fast. You may see records from other counties along with any Perry County data. PATCH is a good tool when you need to check for criminal history across the state, not just in one county.

PATCH criminal background check system for Perry County booking records

Note: PATCH shows charges and outcomes but not the full booking record. For the full intake data from Perry County, call the prison or submit a formal request.

Perry County 72 Hour Booking Alerts

VINELink at vinelink.com offers free custody alerts for the Perry County Prison. Sign up to get a call, text, or email when someone is booked, moved, or released. The service was built for crime victims but anyone can use it.

Register with the person's name and select Perry County. The system sends alerts as changes happen. This is much easier than calling the prison over and over. You will know right away if someone's status changes at the Perry County Prison.

Right-to-Know Requests for Perry County Records

The Right-to-Know Law in Pennsylvania lets you ask for public records from any county agency. In Perry County, you can send a written request to the prison or the sheriff for booking records and arrest data. The county has five business days to respond to your request.

Most adult booking records from Perry County are public. Sealed cases are not. Juvenile records are not public. The county can charge fees for copies and staff time. If your request is denied, you can appeal to the state Office of Open Records.

Put your request in writing. A phone call can get you basic details. But a written request carries more weight under the law. It also starts the five-day response clock. Send it to the agency that holds the records you need.

Pennsylvania Right-to-Know Law for requesting Perry County booking records

Note: If the county denies your request, the denial must be in writing. It must state the reason. You then have 15 business days to file an appeal with the Office of Open Records.

Local Law Enforcement and Perry County Bookings

Perry County has a limited number of local police departments. Many areas rely on the Pennsylvania State Police for coverage. The PSP Newport barracks handles a large share of the calls in the county. When a trooper makes an arrest, the person is brought to the Perry County Prison for booking.

New Bloomfield, Marysville, and a few other towns have their own police. These departments make arrests and bring people to the same prison. Every arrest in Perry County goes through the same booking process at the same facility. The 72 hour booking rules apply the same way no matter which agency made the arrest.

If you know which agency handled the arrest, contact them for the incident report. The booking record stays with the prison. The incident report stays with the police department. Both are public records under the Right-to-Know Law for most adult cases.

Perry County sees fewer arrests than its neighbors. Cumberland and Dauphin counties, which border Perry to the south and east, handle far more cases. But Perry County still processes a steady number of bookings each year tied to drug charges, DUI, theft, and domestic cases.

Perry County 72 Hour Booking and What Comes Next

After the arraignment, a Perry County case moves to the next stage. If the person is held on bail, they stay at the prison. If they post bail, they go home and wait for their court date. The next step is the preliminary hearing, which happens within 10 days for jailed defendants or 20 days for those out on bail.

The case number stays the same from booking through the end of the case. The UJS Portal tracks all of it. You can follow a Perry County case from the 72 hour booking through sentencing without leaving the portal. If the case is dismissed, the booking record still exists unless the person gets it expunged.

Note: Expungement is not automatic. The person must file a petition with the court. Until then, the Perry County booking record remains part of the public record and can show up in background checks.

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Nearby Counties

Perry County borders four other counties. An arrest near a county line will be booked in the county where it took place. Check the nearby counties if you are not sure where the arrest happened.

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