Search Campbell County Felony Records

Campbell County felony records are searchable through the county’s tncrtinfo portal and, when needed, the Circuit Court Clerk at the courthouse in Jacksboro. The county serves Jacksboro, LaFollette, and the surrounding area, so the file you need may live online or in a paper drawer at the clerk office. A good search starts with a name, a case number, or a hearing date. That is the safest way to keep the search tight and avoid pulling the wrong record when a name is common.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Campbell County Quick Facts

Jacksboro County Seat
tncrtinfo Online Portal
8-4:30 Weekday Hours
3 Courts Court System

Campbell County Felony Records Portal

The main online route is Campbell County Online Court Records. That portal is the county’s public court entry point, and it is the fastest place to see whether a felony case is in the system. Campbell County also keeps a government site at campbellcountytn.gov, which is useful when you need courthouse hours or office details before you make the trip.

Campbell County’s research says the court system serves Jacksboro, LaFollette, and the surrounding communities. It also says the county seat is Jacksboro and the Circuit Court Clerk works from the courthouse there. That gives you a clean path: check the portal first, then check the clerk if the file is older, incomplete, or not public. Online access is available for current cases, so newer matters are the best fit for the search tool.

When the portal gives you a partial hit, do not stop too soon. Campbell County records can include criminal cases, civil cases, probate, family court matters, and traffic violations. A felony matter can have pieces that show up in more than one court. The portal gives you the start, and the clerk fills in the rest.

Campbell County Felony Records online court records portal

The county portal is the first stop for a clean public search. If you do not see the file you expected, the courthouse is the next step.

How to Search Campbell County Felony Records

Start with the full name of the person in the case. If you have a case number, use it. If you know the hearing date, add that too. Those three facts are enough to keep most searches on track. The tncrtinfo system works best when the search terms are close to the way the case was filed. That means careful spelling matters. A small typo can hide a record and make the search look empty when the case is really there.

The county courthouse in Jacksboro is the place to go when the portal stops short. Campbell County does not list a long public record history in the research, so the clerk office becomes the main backup for older files and paper copies. That is normal for a county search. You may find the basic docket online, then need the courthouse for certified copies or deeper file review.

Use these details before you search Campbell County felony records:

  • Full legal name of the person
  • Case number, if known
  • Hearing date or year
  • Court type, if known

That short list keeps the search practical. It also helps the clerk office move faster if you need a paper file instead of the online hit.

Campbell County Felony Records county government page

The county government site is a good backup when you need office details or want to confirm the right courthouse before you leave home.

Campbell County Felony Records Access

Campbell County’s research points to Circuit Court, General Sessions Court, and probate and family matters as part of the local court mix. That makes sense for felony work, because the first hearing and later court steps can show up in different places. A felony case may begin with a short entry and later grow into a larger file at the courthouse. If you need the full record path, the clerk office is where that chain starts to make sense.

The Circuit Court Clerk is located at the Campbell County Courthouse in Jacksboro, and the office keeps weekday hours of 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM. The research does not list a direct phone number, so the county government site is the safest link to use when you need to confirm how the office wants requests sent. That may save you a trip if you only need a simple case check.

Campbell County records can show criminal cases, civil cases, probate, family court matters, and traffic violations. A felony case is only one piece of that wider record set. If you are trying to track a case through the local courts, the portal gives you a start, but the courthouse still matters when the file needs more detail.

Fees for Campbell County Records

The Campbell County research does not publish a local fee chart, so the clerk office should confirm the current copy cost before you request paper records. That is the right move. County copy fees often change, and certified copies cost more than plain copies. Online search access is the best first step when you only need to know whether a case exists.

If you need a statewide criminal history rather than a Campbell County court file, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation has a $29 background check. That is a separate state service. It can help when you need a broader criminal history or want to confirm that the county file matches the state record. The fee is non-refundable, so it makes sense to use it only when the county portal is not enough.

County files and state checks serve different jobs. The county file is the court record. The state check is the broader history.

Campbell County Felony Records Limits

The Tennessee Public Records Act, T.C.A. § 10-7-503 et seq., gives the public access to many government files, but not every file. Sealed records, redacted fields, and confidential matters are still protected. Campbell County follows the same rule. If a file does not show in the portal, it may be blocked by law instead of missing from the courthouse.

Records cleared under T.C.A. § 40-32-101 are also handled differently. Expunged files do not stay in the open in the same way a live case does. That can make a search feel incomplete if you do not know the reason. The Tennessee courts Self Help Center can help you understand what should be public and what should not.

That is why a clean search starts with the portal and ends with the clerk if needed. It keeps the process simple and keeps you from assuming a file is gone when it is only protected.

State Resources for Campbell County Felony Records

When Campbell County’s local portal is not enough, the state tools help finish the job. The Tennessee courts site at tncourts.gov offers forms and court guidance. The Public Case History tool at pch.tncourts.gov is useful when a case has appellate history. The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation page and the TDOC FOIL page can also help if your question is really about a person’s broader criminal status instead of one county court file.

Use the state links that match the job:

Those resources are the clean backup when you need more than a county docket line. They also help if you need to explain the difference between a court case and a state record check.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results