Search Giles County Police Blotter

Giles County police blotter searches usually start with the sheriff office and jail, then move to county records if you need a copy or a court follow-up. That works well in Giles County because the sheriff, jail, and records functions sit in the same local network. Pulaski is the county seat, so most county-side search work runs through that office cluster first. If you know the name, the date, or the arresting agency, you can usually narrow the search fast. This page keeps the local process and the statewide backup tools together so you do not have to guess where the record lives.

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Giles County Police Blotter Facts

29,285 Population
611 Square Miles
278 Violent Crime Rate
Pulaski County Seat

Giles County Police Blotter Sources

The Giles County Sheriff's Department is the main local starting point for Giles County police blotter work. Research for this page identifies Sheriff Kyle Helton, and the sheriff office includes administration, patrol, investigations, corrections, and records. That matters because the same office can help with arrest information, custody questions, and records follow-up. In a county like Giles, the sheriff is usually the first call when a police blotter entry is fresh. If the event began in Pulaski or anywhere else in Giles County, the sheriff office is the cleanest first stop.

The Giles County Sheriff's Department website is the main official county portal for law enforcement and records contact details.

The county research also lists the sheriff office at 200 Thomas Gatlin Drive in Pulaski with phone 931-363-3505. That address is useful because it ties the sheriff and jail together. For a Giles County police blotter search, that often means one office can answer the first question even if a later court file lives somewhere else.

Giles County Police Blotter Jail Search

The Giles County Jail is the core custody record for most Giles County police blotter searches. Research for this page says the jail roster updates every 24 hours and is sorted by booking date. The roster includes the inmate’s name, age, charges, arresting agency, and bond information. That is enough detail to confirm whether someone was booked and where the case stands now. The jail also lists the jail administrator, Teresa Mattox, along with the jail phone and fax numbers. Those details make the page useful for both a quick custody check and a more formal follow-up.

This Giles County jail information page is the manifest-linked source for the jail image used on this page.

Giles County Police Blotter jail information page

Use this Giles County police blotter image when you want the current custody path, roster style, or jail contact details rather than a broader court record.

The jail package and mail rules in the research file also tell you how tightly the facility controls intake and property. In practice, that means the county is actively managing inmate status and correspondence, which makes the roster a reliable first stop when you are checking a recent arrest. Giles County police blotter searches are usually faster when you start here.

Giles County Police Blotter Records

Giles County public records requests go through the county government office and the public records coordinator. Research for this page lists the coordinator at 1 Public Square in Pulaski, phone 931-363-2106, with weekday office hours from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Requests must be in writing and Tennessee state ID is required. That gives you a clear access path, even if the local office is small. A Giles County police blotter request works best when it is specific. Use the person’s name, the date if you know it, and whether you want a booking record, a sheriff record, or a court follow-up.

The county rule in the research says the response time is seven business days. That lines up with the general public-records process across Tennessee. If the county needs more detail, narrow the request and send it back with the exact record type. That is usually faster than sending a broad request and hoping the office can sort it out. Giles County police blotter records are easier to locate when the request matches the office that created the file.

For statewide guidance, the Tennessee Open Records Counsel page is the best backup for access questions and request process rules.

Giles County Police Blotter Law

Tennessee law still frames the Giles County process. Under Tenn. Code Ann. § 10-7-503, public records held by county offices are open to Tennessee citizens unless another law blocks release. That means Giles County police blotter material is generally available, but not every part of every file is guaranteed to release in full. The county can still rely on the exemptions in Tenn. Code Ann. § 10-7-504 when records are active or protected.

That matters in practice. A police blotter request can return a booking summary, a redacted incident file, or a full public record depending on the stage of the case. If the matter is still live, the sheriff or jail may be the only office that can confirm the basics right away. Older cases may move to the county clerk or the Tennessee State Library and Archives. Giles County police blotter searches often need that handoff when a booking has already turned into a court matter.

Giles County Police Blotter Access

Some Giles County police blotter searches are really custody follow-ups. If that is the case, the Tennessee Department of Correction and VINE can help after booking, especially if the person moves out of county custody. TDOC FOIL is useful if the person later enters state custody, while VINE helps with custody notifications in participating systems. Those tools do not replace the county roster, but they do extend the search when the local trail stops.

The Tennessee State Library and Archives is the other important backup. It can help with older county and court material when the local office no longer has a convenient digital path. In a county the size of Giles, that backup often matters more than a generic statewide database. Start local first, then use the state tools if the record has aged out of the live jail or sheriff system.

Giles County Police Blotter Tips

Use the full name if you have it. Add the booking date if possible. If you only know the city, mention Pulaski first because it is the county seat and the main county contact point. A narrow Giles County police blotter request is much easier to process than a broad one. The sheriff office and county records coordinator can usually tell you quickly whether the file is in the jail system, the sheriff office, or the county records path.

  • Start with the sheriff office for arrest and custody questions.
  • Use the jail roster for current booking and bond details.
  • Send written records requests to the county coordinator.
  • Use state tools when the local trail ends.

Giles County police blotter work is straightforward once you focus on the right office. The county does not need a complicated workflow. It just needs the right name, date, and request type.

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Giles County Cities

Giles County includes Ardmore, Pulaski, Lynnville, Elkton, and Minor Hill. Pulaski is the county seat, so it is usually the first place to start a Giles County police blotter search.

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