Baldwin County 24 Hour Booking Search

Baldwin County 24 hour booking records are managed by the sheriff's office in Milledgeville, Georgia. Milledgeville serves as the county seat and is where the county jail operates. Every arrest in Baldwin County goes through this facility for processing. The sheriff's office logs names, charges, bond amounts, and other booking details around the clock. You can look into recent arrests by calling the office, visiting in person, or checking the sheriff's website for any available online tools.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Baldwin County Quick Facts

Milledgeville County Seat
24/7 Jail Booking
Phone Record Access
Georgia State

Baldwin County 24 Hour Booking Office

The Baldwin County Sheriff's Office is at 119 Old Monticello Road in Milledgeville. This is the central hub for all law enforcement and jail operations in the county. When deputies or city police make an arrest in Baldwin County, the person is brought here for booking. Staff takes a photo, collects fingerprints, and records the charges. The jail operates 24 hours a day, seven days a week, so arrests are processed no matter when they happen.

The Baldwin County Sheriff's Office website has information about the office and its services.

Georgia Department of Corrections for Baldwin County state inmate searches

The Georgia Department of Corrections tracks offenders serving state prison sentences, which is a separate system from the Baldwin County jail.

Baldwin County has a moderate jail capacity given the area's population. The Milledgeville Police Department and Georgia College campus police also bring arrests through this booking process. All of these go on the same booking log at the county jail.

Address 119 Old Monticello Road, Milledgeville, GA 31061
Phone (478) 445-4891
Website www.baldwincountyga.com/sheriff

Search Baldwin County 24 Hour Booking Data

Start by calling the Baldwin County Sheriff's Office at (478) 445-4891. The jail staff can tell you if someone is currently in custody and share basic booking information. This is the quickest way to find out about a recent arrest. You can also go to the office at 119 Old Monticello Road during business hours for an in-person inquiry. Check the sheriff's website for any online inmate search tools that may be available for Baldwin County.

For a formal records request, Georgia's Open Records Act gives you the right to ask. Under O.C.G.A. § 50-18-70, all booking records are public. The Baldwin County Sheriff's Office must respond within three business days per O.C.G.A. § 50-18-71. The first 15 minutes of staff time are free. After that, fees are calculated at the hourly rate of the lowest paid employee who can pull the records. Copy charges are typically $0.10 per page. You can submit your request by mail, email, or in person at the sheriff's office in Milledgeville.

Note: Written requests should include the name of the person, approximate date of arrest, and what records you want.

What Baldwin County Bookings Show

Each booking record from Baldwin County contains the arrested person's name and date of birth. The charges are listed along with whether they are felonies or misdemeanors. Bond amounts appear when set by a judge or magistrate. The arresting agency is noted. In Baldwin County, that could be the sheriff's office, the Milledgeville Police, or another agency. The booking date, time, and a unique booking number are also recorded.

Georgia law protects some information from release. O.C.G.A. § 50-18-72 requires that social security numbers, financial account details, and medical information be removed from any public copy. Juvenile records are sealed entirely. But initial arrest reports always stay public under this same statute. Even during an active investigation, the arrest report for a Baldwin County booking is accessible. Booking photos are subject to restrictions under O.C.G.A. § 35-1-18, which limits how law enforcement can share them online.

Baldwin County 24 Hour Booking Access

A single Baldwin County booking is part of a broader criminal history. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation runs the Georgia Crime Information Center, which tracks arrests and court outcomes from all 159 counties. This gives a fuller picture than a local booking record alone. You can request your own criminal history from the Baldwin County Sheriff's Office for a small fee, or go through the state system for a more complete report.

The GAPS fingerprinting service handles state background checks. Results typically come back within 24 to 48 hours. Under O.C.G.A. § 35-3-34, you need written consent to get another person's full criminal history. Without it, only felony conviction data is public. The GDC offender search tool covers state prison inmates but not Baldwin County jail bookings specifically.

Note: Employers in Georgia often require fingerprint-based checks through GAPS for positions involving vulnerable populations.

Sealing Records in Baldwin County

Georgia allows arrest records to be restricted from public view in certain cases. Under O.C.G.A. § 35-3-37, if charges from a Baldwin County arrest were dropped, dismissed, or not pursued by the prosecutor, you can apply for record restriction. The local prosecutor must approve the application. Once restricted, the arrest no longer appears on public background checks. Only law enforcement and judges can see it after that.

The First Offender Act at O.C.G.A. § 42-8-60 is a separate option. If you completed a sentence under first offender terms, the charge is sealed and you are exonerated. This applies to Baldwin County cases the same as any other county. For mugshots posted on third-party websites, O.C.G.A. § 10-1-393.5 forces those sites to remove booking photos at no cost when the arrest qualifies for restriction. Send a written request with your full name, date of birth, arrest date, and the arresting agency. The site has 30 days to comply.

Baldwin County Open Records Rights

O.C.G.A. § 50-18-70 is the foundation for public records access in Georgia. It covers all documents that the Baldwin County Sheriff's Office creates or receives. Booking logs, arrest reports, and jail records all qualify. You do not need a reason to request them. The law protects your right to see these records regardless of who you are or where you live.

Penalties for violating the Open Records Act are set out in O.C.G.A. § 50-18-74. A first violation can bring a fine of up to $1,000. Further violations in the same 12-month period can cost up to $2,500 each. If an agency destroys records to block your request, that is a separate criminal offense. These penalties apply to all Georgia public offices, including the Baldwin County Sheriff's Office. If you believe your request was improperly denied, you can file a complaint or take legal action in court.

Nearby Georgia Counties

Baldwin County shares borders with several other counties. If you are unsure where an arrest took place, these nearby counties may have the booking record.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results