Utah 72 Hour Booking Database

Utah 72 hour booking records show arrests at county jails across the state. Sheriff offices in all 29 Utah counties keep these files. Each booking record lists who was arrested, the date of the arrest, and what charges were filed. You can search 72 hour booking data through county inmate rosters, the Utah Bureau of Criminal Identification, and the Utah Department of Corrections offender search. Many Utah counties post booking records on their websites for free. Some provide full inmate rosters with search tools that let you look up 72 hour booking records by name.

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Utah 72 Hour Booking Quick Facts

29 Counties
72 Hours Charge Filing Window
Statewide Database Coverage
Public Record Access

Utah 72 Hour Booking Records

The state of Utah tracks criminal records through several agencies. The Utah Bureau of Criminal Identification is a division of the Department of Public Safety. BCI serves as the central hub for criminal history data in Utah. This includes 72 hour booking records from county jails across all 29 counties. BCI is at 4315 South 2700 West, Suite 1300 in Taylorsville, Utah. Their phone number is (801) 965-4445. Office hours run Monday through Friday from 8:00 am to 5:00 pm.

Utah Bureau of Criminal Identification 72 hour booking records

BCI keeps criminal history records for the whole state. You can get a copy of your own Utah criminal record in person or by mail. The in-person fee is $15.00. You need a valid government photo ID. For mail requests, send a completed application to the Bureau of Criminal Identification at 3888 West 5400 South, Salt Lake City, Utah 84129. The fee for a Right of Access request is $20. BCI also maintains the state sex offender registry and the Utah Amber Alert system. These records connect to 72 hour booking data from county jails in Utah.

The Utah Department of Corrections manages the state prison system. UDC runs facilities including the Utah State Prison and Central Utah Correctional Facility. Their website has an offender search tool. This tool shows records for people in state custody or on parole. It does not show county jail 72 hour booking records directly, but it tracks offenders after they leave the county system in Utah.

Search Booking Records in Utah

Utah has several ways to search for 72 hour booking records. Online tools are the fastest. County sheriff websites often post inmate rosters that show current bookings. The Utah State Courts XChange system gives access to court records from district and justice courts across Utah. You can search by name or case number. Filing records and dispositions are both in the system. The XChange database goes back to July 1, 2011 for justice court criminal matters. For help with court records, call the Utah State Law Library at 801-238-7990.

Utah State Courts XChange 72 hour booking case search

You can also search booking records at the county level in Utah. Each county sheriff runs a jail. Most post inmate rosters online. Salt Lake County has the most complete system. Their inmate lookup tool lets you search by name, booking number, or state ID. Results show charges, bail amounts, and court dates for Utah bookings. Weber County posts a roster with about 737 current inmates at any time. Cache County shows booking data for the past 30 days with no login needed.

To search 72 hour booking records in Utah, you need:

  • Full name of the person
  • County where the arrest took place
  • Approximate date of the booking
  • Booking number if you have it

Note: Court records are updated weekly in the Utah XChange system, so recent 72 hour booking data may not appear right away.

What Booking Records Include

A 72 hour booking record in Utah holds key facts about an arrest. The BCI criminal history records division sets the standard for what data gets tracked. When someone is booked into a county jail in Utah, staff collect personal details, take a photo, and record fingerprints. All charges are listed. Bail amounts are set. Court dates get assigned. This data forms the core of every 72 hour booking record in Utah.

Utah BCI criminal history records for 72 hour booking

Research from the University of Utah found that booking records in Utah vary by county. Utah County shows full name, arrest date, booking number, status, height, weight, eye and hair color, gender, year of birth, and birth country. Charges list the court, case number, bail, and whether bail is bondable. Salt Lake County shows gender, age, weight, race, hair color, eye color, charges, and bail. Davis County lists name, gender, age, booking date, arresting agency, housing unit, and charges with the state statute. Each county in Utah tracks 72 hour booking data in its own way, but all keep the basic arrest facts.

A Utah booking record typically shows:

  • Full name and physical description
  • Arrest date and booking date
  • Arresting agency
  • Charges filed
  • Bail amount and bond status
  • Court dates and case numbers

Utah Arrest and Booking Process

The 72 hour booking process in Utah starts when law enforcement makes an arrest. Under Utah Code Title 77, prosecutors must typically file charges within 72 hours of an arrest and booking. If charges are not filed in that window, the person may be released. This 72 hour period is a critical part of the criminal justice process in Utah. It puts a time limit on how long someone can sit in a county jail without formal charges.

The Utah Department of Public Safety oversees law enforcement standards across the state. DPS coordinates with the Bureau of Criminal Identification, Highway Patrol, State Bureau of Investigation, and State Crime Laboratory. These agencies work together to support the 72 hour booking system in Utah counties.

Utah Department of Public Safety 72 hour booking resources

Utah law has specific rules for certain arrests. Under Utah Code 77-36-2.2, officers who respond to domestic violence calls must arrest or cite the offender if probable cause exists. The offense does not need to happen in front of the officer. Any citation must note that the charge involves domestic violence per Utah Code 77-7-20. When a lethality assessment shows a victim is at high risk, officers must transport and book the offender into jail. A citation is not allowed in those cases under Utah Code 77-23-2.2. These rules shape how 72 hour booking records are created in Utah.

Note: DPS has warned about phone scams where fake BCI officers call people claiming they have warrants and demand payment; BCI does not advise people of warrants by phone in Utah.

County Booking Systems in Utah

Each of Utah's 29 counties runs its own jail and booking system. Salt Lake County operates the largest county jail in Utah. Their system processes thousands of bookings each year from police departments across the county. According to research from the University of Utah, Salt Lake County provides the most complete booking data display of any county in the state. Users can search by name, booking number, or state ID. The data does not include booking photos, which helps protect inmate privacy while keeping 72 hour booking records public in Utah.

The Weber County inmate roster shows about 737 current inmates. The roster lists names, gender, age, and booking dates. Users must agree to terms of use before viewing the data. Cache County takes a different approach. They run two systems: a booking data page with 30 days of history and a separate inmate roster. Both show records without a login. Tooele County hides its roster from search engines on purpose. The site uses JavaScript overlays to display data. You must know the URL to find it. This design makes it hard to scrape but still keeps 72 hour booking data open to the public in Utah.

Utah Criminal History and 72 Hour Booking

Criminal history records in Utah tie into 72 hour booking data. The Utah Department of Corrections offender search tool lets you look up people in state custody. You can search by name or offender number. Results show the current facility, offense details, and a projected release date. This system covers people who moved from a county jail to state prison after their 72 hour booking in Utah.

The Utah sex offender registry is another database tied to the criminal justice system. The registry falls under the Utah Sex Offender Registration Act, U.C.A. 77-27-21.5. Schools and colleges get alerts when a registered offender is tied to their campus. The University of Utah Police Department at 1735 E. South Campus Drive in Salt Lake City can be reached at 801-385-2677 for registry questions.

Utah sex offender registry and 72 hour booking records

The Utah Department of Corrections family resources page helps families of people in state custody. It covers visitation procedures, how to send mail, and how to deposit money into an inmate account. These resources connect to the broader 72 hour booking and incarceration process in Utah.

Public Access to Booking Data

Utah law gives the public a right to access government records. Under the Government Records Access and Management Act (GRAMA), Utah Code 63G-2, most booking records are open to anyone who asks. You do not need to be the person who was arrested. You do not need to be a lawyer. County jails in Utah must provide booking data to the public unless a specific exception applies. GRAMA governs how agencies handle records requests across all 29 counties.

Utah State Legislature code for 72 hour booking public access

Some records are protected. Under Utah Code 63G-2-305, records that would put a jail at risk or interfere with the control of an offender can be withheld. Records tied to treatment, probation, or parole supervision may also be restricted. Recommendations made to the Board of Pardons and Parole are protected. But basic 72 hour booking data like names, charges, and bail amounts is public in Utah. Most county sheriff offices post this data on their websites for free.

To make a GRAMA request for 72 hour booking records in Utah, submit a written request to the county sheriff office. Include your name, address, phone number, and a clear description of the records you want. The agency must respond within 10 business days. Fees may apply for copies. Regular copies cost about $0.10 per page. The first 15 minutes of staff time are free. Some counties in Utah charge more for booking photos or video.

Note: Fees and response times can vary by county, so contact the local sheriff office to confirm their 72 hour booking records request process in Utah.

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Browse Utah 72 Hour Booking by County

Each county in Utah keeps its own 72 hour booking records at the county jail. Pick a county below to find local booking data, inmate rosters, and sheriff office contact details.

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72 Hour Booking in Utah Cities

Residents arrested in Utah cities are booked into their county jail. Pick a city below to find 72 hour booking resources and local law enforcement details.

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