Smyth County 72 Hour Booking Search
Smyth County sits in southwest Virginia with its county seat at Marion. This page covers Smyth County 72 hour booking records, the jail intake list, and how to look up a recent arrest through the Sheriff's Office. The county sends its inmates to the Southwest Virginia Regional Jail Authority. Most fresh bookings move to the regional jail within hours of intake. The Sheriff and the courts both keep their own piece of the file. The 72 hour window is the standard short hold for new arrests.
Smyth County Overview
Smyth County 72 Hour Booking Lookup
The Sheriff is the main law office in the county. Deputies make most arrests in the towns of Marion, Saltville, and Chilhowie and on the rural county roads. State Police and town officers also bring people in. Each new booking moves through a magistrate first, then to the regional jail.
You can reach the Sheriff at (276) 782-9058 or stop by 222 N. Main Street in Marion. Staff can confirm a fresh booking and tell you the bond amount once it's set. The phone line takes calls day and night.
For agency details, see the Smyth County Sheriff's Office page. The site lists the Sheriff, the chief deputy, and the records clerk.
Smyth County Sheriff and Regional Jail
Smyth County sends its inmates to the Southwest Virginia Regional Jail Authority. The authority runs four jails across the southwest part of the state. Each one serves a cluster of counties. The authority site lets you search inmates across all four sites at once, which helps when a person could be at any of them.
By Virginia Code § 19.2-82, a person taken in without a warrant must be brought to a magistrate "forthwith." That step kicks off the 72 hour booking clock. The magistrate then signs the warrant and sets bond. The deputy walks the person to the jail for intake.
The jail releases basic booking facts on request. The name, charge, and booking date are open under the Virginia FOIA law in § 2.2-3700.
Note: Some inmates booked in Smyth move to a different SWVRJA facility based on bed space. Always check all four sites if you can't find the name.
How to Search Smyth County 72 Hour Booking
Start with the SWVRJA inmate roster. The site is updated daily. You can look up a person by name and see what jail they're at. If the person is not on the list yet, call the Sheriff or the jail front desk.
To run a name search you need a first and last name. A rough date of arrest helps. A date of birth helps when the name is common. Most rosters can be sorted by booking date.
For court hearings tied to a booking, use the Virginia Courts Case Information System. It is free and runs every day. Look up the person by name in General District or Circuit Court.
For statewide custody alerts, use VINELink. The site is free. Sign up and you get a call or email when the custody status changes. The hotline at 1-800-467-4943 takes calls in English and Spanish day and night.
Smyth County Court Records and Bookings
Smyth County is in the 28th Judicial Circuit. Two trial courts handle the cases tied to a booking. The General District Court hears traffic, misdemeanors, and the first call on felony charges. The Circuit Court hears felony trials, jury cases, and appeals.
For court info, visit the Smyth County General District Court page. The site lists hours, judges, and the clerk's office.
The Circuit Court Clerk keeps the case index, the order book, and the file room. State law in § 19.2-389 sets limits on raw criminal history data, but the case file at the courthouse stays open to the public.
Bond and Magistrate Process in Smyth County
The magistrate works around the clock at the courthouse complex in Marion. Once a deputy brings a new arrest in, the magistrate looks at the case. If the charge meets the legal test, the magistrate signs a warrant or summons. Bond is set at the same step.
Bond can be cash, a secured bond with a surety, or release on personal word. Some serious charges allow no bond at all. The magistrate weighs the risk to the public and the person's ties to the area.
If bond is posted, the person walks out with a court date in hand. If not, the wait is at the regional jail. The first court call usually happens within one to two business days.
Note: Some bond conditions add a no-contact order or a check-in rule. Break those and the bond can be revoked at the next court call.
Smyth County 72 Hour Booking Access Rules
Basic booking facts in this county are public. The name, charge, and booking date are open under the Virginia FOIA law. You do not need a reason. You do not need to be tied to the case.
Some parts of a file stay closed. Active case notes, juvenile records, and victim info are held back. The agency cites the law when it denies a part of a request. If you do not agree, you can ask the Virginia FOIA Council for a free opinion.
For your own state record, the Virginia State Police runs the Central Criminal Records Exchange. Use Form SP-167 at vsp.virginia.gov. The fee is $15 per name search.
State prison data is on the Virginia DOC offender locator. That site is for state inmates only.
Legal Help and Records Requests in Smyth County
If a friend or family member is tied to a fresh booking, you have a few help paths. The Public Defender for the area can take the case if the charge is serious and the person cannot pay for counsel. Local legal aid can help with civil sides of an arrest. Most law offices in Marion take walk-ins.
To file a FOIA ask for a booking record, write a short, clear note. List the name, the date, and the type of file you want. Send it to the Sheriff's FOIA officer or the regional jail. They have five work days to reply.