Search Danville 72 Hour Booking

Danville 72 hour booking records cover recent arrests by the Danville Police Department and intake at the Danville Adult Detention Center. The city runs a Police to Citizen portal, the P2C system, which lets the public look up jail inmates and arrest data online. This page walks you through the P2C portal, the records request process, the court file system, and the magistrate steps that turn a fresh arrest into a Danville jail booking. Most basic facts are public, the tools are free, and you can pull a record with just a name and a date.

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Danville 72 Hour Booking Lookup

Danville is an independent city on the North Carolina border. The city runs its own police department and its own jail. Arrests inside city limits are handled by Danville officers, and the suspect goes to the Danville Adult Detention Center after the magistrate review. The P2C portal is the main public source for fresh booking data. The court case file fills in the rest later on.

The fastest tool is the Danville Police to Citizen portal. The system lets you look up jail inmates by last name, first name, date of birth, booking date range, or release date. The record card shows the mugshot, the full name, the date of birth, the physical descriptors, the booking number, the booking date and time, the arresting agency, the charges, the bond amount, the next court date, and the release date if it applies.

Danville Circuit Court 72 hour booking case files
The Danville Circuit Court handles felony files that grow out of a Danville 72 hour booking and move on to indictment.

Once a case is in court, the Circuit Court file picks up where the jail booking record ends. Both data sources are linked by name and case number.

Danville Police Department and Recent Arrests

The Danville Police Department handles patrol, traffic, and most local arrests inside city limits. The department's main page is at danvilleva.gov. The records office at (434) 799-6515 takes FOIA requests for arrest reports and incident reports. The main department line is (434) 799-6510. The address is 510 Patton Street, Danville, VA 24541.

Officers follow Virginia Code § 19.2-82, which says a person taken in without a warrant must go before a magistrate right away. The magistrate looks at probable cause and sets bond. This is the first court step in any Danville jail booking. It happens before the person sees a judge.

The P2C portal is the public face of the records system. It pulls live data from the jail and the police case management system. Most fresh bookings appear within hours. You can also see recent releases on the same page, which is helpful when a person is in and out within a day.

Note: Danville's P2C system is one of the few small-city public portals in Virginia that offers full mugshot and bond data; not every city does this.

How to Search Danville 72 Hour Booking Records

The fastest path is the Danville P2C portal at p2c.danvilleva.gov. The fields are simple. You can leave most blank. Just put in a last name and hit search. The system will pull every match. Click the row to see the full record card with the booking photo and the charges. The release date field is helpful if you are checking on someone who may have already been let out.

VINELink is a strong backup at vinelink.com. VINE pulls live data from most Virginia jails and the state prison system. You can search by name, see the facility, and sign up for free alerts. The hotline at 1-800-467-4943 runs day and night in English and Spanish.

For a name search you usually need:

  • Last name (required on most tools)
  • First name (helps narrow it down)
  • Date of birth if you have it
  • Approximate booking date

If the person is not on the P2C portal, call the Danville Police records line. Sometimes a booking is in process and has not posted to the public site yet. Staff can confirm an in-process intake even when the website lags. They can also tell you if a hold is in place from another agency, which would route the person to a different facility.

Danville Court Records and Bookings

Once a Danville booking turns into a charge, the case moves to a city court. Misdemeanors and traffic cases land in the General District Court. Felonies move to the Circuit Court for trial or plea. Both courts post case data to the statewide system every business day.

You can pull a Danville case file through the Virginia Courts Case Information System. Search by name, hearing date, or case number. The site shows charges, court dates, judges, and dispositions. It is free.

For local hearing info, the Danville General District Court page lists the courthouse address, the clerk hours, and the contact line. Felony files move on to the Circuit Court. The Circuit Court is the trial court of record and holds the file from indictment through sentencing.

Bond and Magistrate Process in Danville

The magistrate is the first judicial officer to look at a Danville 72 hour booking. The magistrate is not a judge, but they have power to set bond, issue arrest warrants, and order short-term holds. They work shifts day and night so a fresh booking can be reviewed at any hour.

Bond can be cash, surety, property, or release on recognizance. The choice depends on the charge, the record, and any flight risk. If the person cannot make bond at first, they stay at the Danville Adult Detention Center until a bond review hearing in front of a judge. A defense lawyer can file a motion to lower the bond or change the terms.

For some charges there is no bond at first. Repeat domestic offenses and certain firearms charges have a hold rule under state law. The judge must hold a hearing before the person can be released. The bond review usually happens within a few days.

Note: The Danville Adult Detention Center handles intake, short-term holds, and most pretrial cases for the city; sentenced state inmates move to a VADOC facility later.

Danville 72 Hour Booking Access Rules

Most basic Danville 72 hour booking facts are open to the public. The name, the charge, and the booking date are public under the Virginia FOIA in § 2.2-3700. You do not need to give a reason. You do not need to be related to the person.

Some details get held back. Virginia Code § 19.2-389 limits the spread of raw criminal history data from the state's Central Criminal Records Exchange. Active investigation files, juvenile records, and victim info are also restricted. The agency must cite the exact statute when it denies a request.

For your own personal record review, the Virginia State Police CCRE handles name-based and fingerprint checks. Mail Form SP-167 with the $15 fee. Processing runs about two weeks. Fingerprint checks pull more detail and cost a bit more.

If a request is denied, you can appeal to a circuit court or ask the Virginia FOIA Council for a non-binding opinion. Most disputes are worked out at the agency level before they reach a judge.

Legal Help and Records Requests in Danville

Danville has a public defender's office that handles court-appointed cases. Legal Aid of the Roanoke Valley and area pro bono groups serve low-income clients near Danville. The Virginia State Bar runs a referral line for paid attorneys. For statewide FOIA help, the FOIA Council at the Division of Legislative Services can answer questions free of charge.

To file a records request, send a short letter or email to the Danville Police records clerk. Include the name, the date of the booking, and your contact info. Cite § 2.2-3700 and ask for the booking log entry, the arrest report, and any related incident report. The agency has five working days to answer. They can ask for a seven-day extension if the file is large.

For state prison data, the VADOC offender locator tracks people who have been sentenced and moved to state prison. It does not show a fresh Danville 72 hour booking. Stay with the P2C portal and VINELink for the recent stuff. Both update often and are free to use.

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