Find Floyd County 72 Hour Booking Records

Floyd County 72 hour booking records are managed by the Floyd County Sheriff's Office in Rome. This northwest Georgia county handles all bookings through its jail facility. There is no public online inmate search for Floyd County, so the best way to check on recent arrests is to call the sheriff's office.

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Floyd County Quick Facts

98,500 Population
Rome County Seat
1 Jail Facility
No Online Inmate Search

Floyd County Sheriff's Office

Sheriff Dave Roberson heads the Floyd County Sheriff's Office at 3 Government Plaza Suite 110, Rome, GA 30161. Call 706-314-0713 for booking and jail questions. The sheriff's staff can tell you if someone is in the jail, what charges they face, and what the bond is. Floyd County is one of the larger counties in northwest Georgia, and the jail handles a steady number of bookings.

Floyd County does not offer a public online inmate search at this time. There is no jail roster on the web, no database you can pull up from home. For a county of nearly 100,000 people, this can be a challenge. The phone is the most direct way to get booking info. Call the jail line during business hours to reach someone who can look up records. After hours, dispatch handles calls and can answer basic questions about who is being held.

Walk-in visits are an option too. The sheriff's office is at Government Plaza in downtown Rome. Bring the full name and date of birth of the person you need to look up. The jail staff process requests like this regularly. Floyd County booking records are public, and the office cannot refuse a simple request for arrest and charge info. All arrests in Floyd County come through this jail. That includes those made by sheriff's deputies, the Rome Police Department, the Cave Spring Police, and the Georgia State Patrol.

Floyd County is part of the Rome Judicial Circuit. Cases from bookings here go to the Superior Court at the Floyd County Courthouse in Rome. The circuit serves Floyd County alone, which means the court calendar is focused entirely on cases from this county. That can help things move along on the court side.

The 72 Hour Booking Timeline in Floyd County

Georgia law sets firm rules on how quickly someone must see a judge after arrest. Under O.C.G.A. § 17-4-26, a person arrested with a warrant must have a first appearance hearing within 72 hours. That hearing is where the judge reads the charges, checks the arrest, and sets bond. This is the origin of the term "72 hour booking." The time starts at the moment of arrest, not when the person is brought to the Floyd County jail.

Warrantless arrests have a shorter rule. O.C.G.A. § 17-4-62 requires a hearing within 48 hours. Deputies or Rome PD officers who arrest someone on the scene create these cases. DUI stops, domestic calls, and drug arrests often fall under this rule. The booking process at the jail is the same. The 48 hour hearing deadline just means the court has to act faster.

First appearance hearings in Floyd County take place at the courthouse in Rome. Because Floyd County has its own judicial circuit, the court keeps a regular schedule for these hearings. The 72 hour and 48 hour rules are met without much trouble in most cases. If the deadline is missed, the arrested person has a right to ask for release. That is rare in Floyd County, but the law protects that right.

Bond can be set at the first hearing or even before it if a standard bond schedule applies. Some charges in Georgia come with preset bond amounts. Call the jail at 706-314-0713 to find out if bond has been set for the person you are looking for.

Floyd County 72 Hour Booking Records and Public Access

Booking records in Floyd County are public. O.C.G.A. § 50-18-72, the Georgia Open Records Act, says anyone can request government records. That includes arrest reports, booking sheets, and charge documents. No reason is needed. The sheriff's office must respond within three business days.

To request records, call 706-314-0713 or go to 3 Government Plaza Suite 110 in Rome. You can also mail a written request. Include the full name and arrest date of the person. The office may charge for copies. Basic info about whether someone is in the jail and what they are charged with can usually be shared over the phone without any formal request.

O.C.G.A. § 35-1-19 covers booking photos. The law says the sheriff cannot give a booking photo to someone who will post it on a site or publication that charges for removal. The photo is still a public record. You can get a copy through a formal open records request as long as it does not violate this law.

The Georgia Department of Corrections runs a free search for people who have moved from county jail to state prison.

Georgia Department of Corrections offender search for Floyd County 72 hour booking records

The GDC offender search shows facility, sentence, and release info. It only covers people in state prison, not those still held in the Floyd County jail waiting for trial.

State Resources for Floyd County Bookings

When you need to look past the Floyd County jail, state tools can help. The Georgia Crime Information Center (GCIC) at the GBI handles full criminal history checks. Call 404-244-2639. A GCIC check pulls records from every county in Georgia. It shows arrests, convictions, and sentences. This is useful when you need the full record on someone, not just the most recent Floyd County booking.

The VINE notification system tracks inmates for free. You register for alerts and get a call, text, or email when someone is released, transferred, or has a court date. The VINE phone number is 833-216-6670. It covers Floyd County and most other Georgia counties. If you need real-time updates on someone in the Floyd County jail, VINE is the best tool for that.

The Georgia Sheriffs' Association lists contact details for every sheriff in the state. Northwest Georgia has a lot of county lines close together, and Floyd County borders several other counties. If you need to check a neighboring jail, the directory makes it easy to find the right number.

Georgia Sheriffs' Association directory for Floyd County and nearby booking contacts

Between the Floyd County Sheriff's Office, VINE, the GDC search, and GCIC, you can follow a booking from the first 72 hours all the way through to final outcome.

72 Hour Booking Record Restriction in Floyd County

Georgia does not expunge most criminal records, but restriction is available. O.C.G.A. § 35-3-37 lets people restrict arrest records when charges were dismissed, not prosecuted, or ended in acquittal. Restriction hides the record from most background checks. It does not erase it. If your Floyd County case ended without a conviction, you may be able to get the record restricted.

The First Offender Act, O.C.G.A. § 42-8-60, is another route. A judge can sentence someone as a first offender if they have no prior felony convictions. After the sentence is finished without issues, the conviction can be sealed. A Floyd County booking that led to a first offender sentence may not show on standard records searches later on. This is a one-time benefit, and the judge has to approve it at sentencing.

To start the restriction process, go through the court that handled the case. The clerk of court at the Floyd County Courthouse in Rome can help with the forms and fees. There is a waiting period, and it takes weeks for the restriction to update across state systems. Law enforcement keeps full access to restricted records. They are only hidden from most public and employer searches.

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Cities in Floyd County

Floyd County includes several cities and towns. All arrests in these areas go through the Floyd County jail. The booking record will show which law enforcement agency made the arrest, even though the sheriff runs the jail.

Other communities in Floyd County include Cave Spring, Shannon, and Lindale. Arrests in all of these areas are processed through the Floyd County booking system at the jail in Rome.

Nearby Counties

These counties border Floyd County. If you are not sure which county handled an arrest, check the location. Northwest Georgia has many counties packed together, and an arrest near the line could end up in a different county's jail.