Search Humphreys County Police Blotter

Humphreys County police blotter searches usually start with the sheriff's office in Waverly, then move to the jail or county records office when you need a copy, a booking status, or older follow-up. That order works well here because the county keeps the public trail close to the jail and the county executive office. If you know the name, the booking date, or the town involved, you can narrow the search fast. This page gathers the main Humphreys County police blotter contacts, jail details, and state backup tools so you can move from a quick check to a record request without guesswork.

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Humphreys County Police Blotter Facts

Waverly County Seat
18,990 Population
68 Jail Capacity
7 Days Records Response

Humphreys County Police Blotter Sources

The Humphreys County Sheriff's Office is the first local stop for a Humphreys County Police Blotter search. Research for this page lists Sheriff Chris Davis, Chief Deputy Rob Edwards, the office address at 112 Thompson St in Waverly, and two phone numbers, 931-296-2301 and 931-209-6378. That is the core contact path when the question starts with an arrest, a warrant, or a recent call for service. The office handles law enforcement, emergency response, warrants, civil process, patrol, corrections, criminal investigations, and K9 work. Those duties matter because they show which side of the record the sheriff keeps and which part belongs to the jail.

Humphreys County is not a giant metro county. It covers 532 square miles and had a population of 18,990 in the research file. That size helps when you are trying to separate one Humphreys County Police Blotter entry from another. A good request usually works best if it names the person, the town, or the date, instead of asking for the whole county at once. When you know the event happened in Waverly, McEwen, or New Johnsonville, say that up front. The sheriff office can sort a narrow question faster than a broad one.

For day-to-day use, think of the sheriff as the front door. If the matter is active, the sheriff office is where the current trail usually starts. If the matter is older or needs a copy, you move one step outward to county records or a state backup tool.

Humphreys County Jail Search

The Humphreys County Jail is at 112 Thompson St, Waverly, TN 37185. Research for this page lists the jail phone number as 931-209-5633 and the capacity as 68 inmates. It houses both state and local inmates, so it is useful when you need custody status, not just the original incident. That makes the jail a natural second stop for a Humphreys County Police Blotter search. Mail is searched for contraband, and inmate mail should be addressed carefully to the jail address in Waverly.

This Humphreys County jail information page is the manifest-linked source for the jail image used here.

Humphreys County police blotter jail information page

Use this image when your Humphreys County Police Blotter search is really about booking status, inmate housing, or the quickest jail contact path. It points you toward the local custody record, which is often the fastest answer when a person has already been booked.

If you are calling about a recent arrest, have the full name ready. A date of birth helps too. So does the rough booking date. Those small details matter because the jail is looking at a live custody file, not a general county index. If the person has already been released, the jail can still help you confirm the booking and tell you which office should have the next record.

Humphreys County Police Blotter Requests

Humphreys County public records requests go through Jessie Wallace, the County Executive and public records coordinator. The research file lists the office at 102 Thompson Street, Room 1, Waverly, TN 37185, with phone number 931-296-7795 and email jwallace@humphreystn.com. Requests can be made in person, by mail, or by email. The county response time in the research is seven business days. That gives a Humphreys County Police Blotter request a clear written path when the sheriff office cannot hand over a copy right away.

The state framework supports that local process. Tennessee public records request guidance explains that records tied to official business should be made available as promptly as possible and that agencies have seven business days to respond when immediate production is not practical. It also makes clear that a records custodian does not have to create a new record just to answer a request. That is useful in Humphreys County because the office may release an existing copy, a redacted copy, or a short response that points you to the right custodian.

A narrow request is better. Name the person, add the date if you know it, and say whether you want a jail record, a sheriff record, or a county copy. If you know the event happened near Waverly, McEwen, or New Johnsonville, include that too. That sort of detail makes a Humphreys County Police Blotter request easier to route and easier to answer.

Strong requests do not need a long story. They need the right identifiers.

  • Full legal name, or the best name you have
  • Approximate arrest, booking, or incident date
  • Town, road, or area tied to the event
  • Whether you need a jail record, arrest record, or copy

When the request stays tight, the county office can focus on the exact Humphreys County Police Blotter file you want instead of sorting through extra material that does not help.

Humphreys County Records and Archives

When a Humphreys County Police Blotter search reaches beyond the local jail or sheriff office, state tools can fill the gap. TBI TORIS is the Tennessee name-based criminal history system. It is not the same thing as a county blotter or a live booking feed, but it is useful when you need a statewide check tied to a person rather than a single incident. The TBI page explains that the system is a name-based open records check and that criminal history results come from fingerprint-submitted arrests. That makes it a good backup when the local Humphreys County trail is thin.

The Tennessee State Library and Archives is the next fallback when a Humphreys County Police Blotter matter is older or has drifted into archived county or court material. TSLA is where Tennessee researchers often go when a live county office no longer holds the only copy. The state archive does not replace the sheriff or the county executive, but it gives you a second path when the local record has moved out of daily use.

This Tennessee State Library and Archives page is the state fallback source for older Humphreys County police blotter follow-up.

Tennessee State Library and Archives public records resource

Use it when the Humphreys County Police Blotter trail turns historical, when you need archived county material, or when a local office tells you the live file is no longer the best starting point.

If the person has moved into state custody, TDOC FOIL can show offender status, location, photo, offense, sentence, parole hearing status, and release information. VINELink is the follow-up tool for custody alerts and notification updates. Those tools do not replace Humphreys County records, but they help you keep track of the person once the local arrest trail has grown into a larger custody record.

Humphreys County Police Blotter Tips

The best Humphreys County Police Blotter request starts narrow and stays narrow. Use the full name if you have it. Add the date if you know it. Say whether the event happened in Waverly, McEwen, or New Johnsonville. Those small details make a real difference in a county this size. They also help the office tell one record from another when more than one person shares a similar name.

Keep the request focused on the record you actually want. If you need current custody status, the jail is the best first call. If you need a written copy, the county records path is the better fit. If you want a statewide history check or a state custody trail, move to TBI TORIS or TDOC FOIL. That simple order keeps a Humphreys County Police Blotter search from drifting into the wrong office.

Good requests save time for everyone. They also produce better answers.

  • Start with the sheriff office for arrest, warrant, and incident questions.
  • Use the jail for booking status, inmate housing, and mail questions.
  • Use county records when you need a copy or a written response.
  • Use TSLA, TORIS, FOIL, or VINELink when the local trail needs a state backup.

If the answer is still unclear, go back to the office that owns the record and ask for the next step. That works better than sending a broad follow-up to every office at once.

Humphreys County Records Contacts

Waverly is the county seat, so it is the natural center for a Humphreys County records search. The county executive office, jail, and sheriff office are all tied to that same public record trail. That makes the county easy to work through once you know which office controls the file. It also keeps a Humphreys County Police Blotter request from bouncing around between offices that do not own the answer you need.

Jessie Wallace, the County Executive and public records coordinator, is the main county contact for written requests. The office address is 102 Thompson Street, Room 1, Waverly, TN 37185. The phone number in the research is 931-296-7795, and the official email is jwallace@humphreystn.com. If you are writing from McEwen or New Johnsonville, include the town name in the request. That small detail can make the record easier to find, especially when the file began with a local arrest or a short jail stay.

Humphreys County’s public record trail is simple once you know the county seat and the right office. That is the main advantage here. You do not need a long search plan. You just need the right contact, a clear date range, and a record type that matches the question.

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