Search Montgomery County Recent Arrests
Montgomery County Recent Arrests can be checked through the sheriff, the county jail, city police sources, and Tennessee state record tools when one office does not answer the full question. Clarksville is one of Tennessee's largest cities, so many local searches begin there. If you need an arrest record, a custody check, or a way to follow what happened after booking, Montgomery County has more than one local path. Some searches stay simple. Others need a tighter plan because county and city records can split quickly. The best results usually come from deciding first whether you need inmate status, the county arrest record, or the city record tied to Clarksville.
Montgomery County Quick Facts
Montgomery County Recent Arrests Overview
The Montgomery County Sheriff's Office is the main county source for arrest records, incident reports, accident reports, background-check direction, and local public safety resources in Montgomery County. Sheriff John Fuson leads the office at 120 Commerce St. in Clarksville. That office is the right county starting point when the arrest happened outside city police jurisdiction or when you need the county-side record rather than a city-only summary. A focused request with a name, date, and place is much more useful than a broad request tied only to one surname.
Montgomery County is on the Kentucky border and has about 220,000 residents, making it one of the largest counties in Tennessee. Clarksville drives much of the arrest activity, which means the record trail can split between county and city sources fast. A person searching Montgomery County Recent Arrests may need the sheriff, the county jail, the Clarksville Police Department, or a state court source depending on where the arrest happened and what part of the record they need.
The sheriff page at mcgtn.org/sheriff/ is the source for the image below and the best county page to keep open while sorting Montgomery County Recent Arrests.

That page anchors the county contact details before you move into the jail, Clarksville police, or statewide court tools.
How to Search Montgomery County Recent Arrests
Montgomery County searches work best when you split them by purpose. Start with the jail if the first question is whether the person is still in custody. Move to the sheriff if you need the county arrest record or incident file. Use the Clarksville Police Department at cityofclarksville.com/police-department/ if the arrest happened inside Clarksville city limits. Use the Tennessee Court System if the booking has already turned into a case.
The Montgomery County Jail can be reached at (931) 553-7800. The research says the facility is modern, can hold about 500 inmates, and supports services such as video visitation, commissary, and medical care. The page does not confirm a public inmate roster, so phone contact is still the practical way to check current custody. That matters when the arrest is fresh or when broader public systems have not updated yet.
- Full booked name
- Approximate arrest or booking date
- Whether the arrest happened in Clarksville or elsewhere in Montgomery County
- Any known booking or case number
Those details help staff narrow the record and reduce confusion. In Montgomery County, the city-county split matters enough that location can change which office should answer first.
Montgomery County Jail and Recent Arrests
The Montgomery County Jail houses county inmates and pre-trial detainees. A jail call is the right move when the question is about present custody, but it is not the same as an arrest record request. The jail can confirm whether the person is still there now. The sheriff handles the county-side record about what happened at the time of arrest.
That split matters because many people start with a custody question and then realize they need the report itself. Montgomery County adds one more layer because Clarksville Police may hold the first report for arrests made inside city limits. Treating those as separate tasks makes a Montgomery County search easier to manage and easier to verify.
When the jail answer and the report trail line up, the picture gets clearer. If they do not, that difference may point to a release, a transfer, or a case that already moved into court or another system.
| Sheriff's Office | Montgomery County Sheriff's Office 120 Commerce St. Clarksville, TN 37040 Phone: (931) 648-0611 |
|---|---|
| Jail | Montgomery County Jail Phone: (931) 553-7800 |
| Record Type | Arrest records, incident reports, accident reports, and local custody details |
Requesting Montgomery County Recent Arrests Records
Montgomery County arrest records can include an arrest record, an incident report, an accident report, and local background-check direction. The sheriff's office keeps that county-side file. If the arrest happened within Clarksville city limits, the Clarksville Police Department at 135 Commerce St. may hold the first report instead. That city split matters. A broad county request can fail if the city created the record you actually need.
If the case has already moved into court, the Tennessee Court System at tncourts.gov is the next public source to check. It will not replace the local arrest record, but it can show what happened after booking. That matters when Montgomery County Recent Arrests are only one part of a larger case trail.
The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation criminal history page at tn.gov/tbi/criminal-history-records.html is the broader statewide tool when a county-only search is not enough. It also fits Montgomery County because the sheriff points background-check needs toward the TBI while local offices handle the first county or city record.
Once the search is broken into custody, county report, city report, and court pieces, it becomes much easier to tell what part of the Montgomery County record trail you still need.
Public Access and Montgomery County Recent Arrests
Montgomery County arrest records are shaped by the Tennessee Public Records Act. Under T.C.A. § 10-7-503, many public records are open for inspection during normal business hours unless another law limits access. That is the main legal basis for asking the sheriff, city police, or another local office for the public parts of a Montgomery County arrest file.
Reasonable copy costs may still apply under T.C.A. § 10-7-506. Some files may also be restricted by laws such as T.C.A. § 37-1-153, which limits access to juvenile records. A missing file does not always mean no record exists. It can also mean the file is limited by law.
The Office of Open Records Counsel at comptroller.tn.gov/office-functions/open-records-counsel/ can help when a request needs more structure. Its FAQ page at comptroller.tn.gov/office-functions/open-records-counsel/open-meetings/frequently-asked-questions/tennessee-public-records-act-faqs.html explains Tennessee public records requests in direct language.
The FAQ page below is a useful statewide source when a Montgomery County request needs a cleaner frame.

That guidance fits Montgomery County because the local request path is layered, but the release rules still come from the same Tennessee public records law.
Tennessee Tools for Montgomery County Recent Arrests
The Tennessee Department of Correction page at tn.gov/correction.html is useful if a Montgomery County case has moved into state custody or supervision. The TDOC FOIL search at apps.tn.gov/foil-app/search.jsp covers state prison, probation, and parole records, but it does not list county jail inmates.
The Tennessee sex offender registry at sor.tbi.tn.gov/home and the TBI explanation page at tn.gov/tbi/general-information/tennessee-sex-offender-registry.html are also public tools that can add context to a broader name or address search. They are not arrest files, but they can support a larger public record review when Montgomery County Recent Arrests are only part of the full trail.
Used together, the sheriff, county jail, city police, and state tools make Montgomery County more layered than many counties in this project. That is why splitting the search into clear steps matters here.