Montgomery County Felony Records

Montgomery County felony records are available through a strong county system that includes an independent web inquiry service and the county's circuit court. That makes the search more flexible than in counties that rely on one portal alone. The county seat is Clarksville, and the Circuit Court Clerk works from 2 Millennium Plaza, Suite 115. If you need a felony file, you can search online first, then move to the clerk or chancery office if you need the paper record. Montgomery County is one of the better places in Tennessee to search by name, date, or case number and still have a clear local office path.

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Montgomery County Quick Facts

Clarksville County Seat
tncrtinfo Portal
Web Inquiry Extra Search
Circuit / GS Court Types

Montgomery County Felony Records Overview

Montgomery County provides comprehensive online court records access, and that is the biggest reason the county is simple to search. The research says the county maintains an independent web inquiry service in addition to tncrtinfo.com. That gives you two routes for case review. You can search criminal and traffic records from November 1, 1999 to the present through the web inquiry service, and you can use the portal for the broader county records workflow. If you need a felony case, that combination gives you a solid first pass before you ever contact the clerk.

Use the county circuit page at mcgtn.org/circuit for local office references and use the web inquiry service at d6.mcgtn.org/circuit/online-court-records for the direct search. The county seat is Clarksville, and the Circuit Court Clerk can help when the portal result is not enough. Montgomery County is useful for record searches because it gives you both an online public record layer and a courthouse office layer. That helps when a case is active or when you need a paper copy later.

Montgomery County records include felony cases, misdemeanors, civil cases, family law matters, and traffic violations. The county also uses Circuit Court, General Sessions Court, Juvenile Court, and Chancery Court, so a felony matter may cross more than one office. If the portal gives you only the docket entry, the clerk can tell you whether there is a fuller file ready for inspection. That can save a lot of time in a busy county like Clarksville.

For state-level help, use tncourts.gov and the public case history page at tncourts.gov/courts/supreme-court/public-case-history. Those pages help when you need the broader Tennessee court context.

The county circuit court image at mcgtn.org/circuit is the best local reference for this page, because the online-records image in the manifest is flagged and should not be used.

Montgomery County Felony Records circuit court image

The circuit court image is the safe local visual for the Montgomery County page and matches the courthouse side of the search.

The web inquiry service at d6.mcgtn.org/circuit/online-court-records is a useful local tool for Montgomery County felony records and older case searches.

Montgomery County Felony Records Tennessee public court records image

The state public court records image is a safe fallback that still matches the online-records side of the county search.

Court Office Montgomery County Circuit Court Clerk
Location 2 Millennium Plaza, Suite 115, Clarksville, TN 37040
Phone 931-648-5700
Online Records Criminal/Traffic from 1999 to present; Civil from 2006 to present

How to Search Montgomery County Felony Records

Use the web inquiry service first if you want the fastest route. It covers a long time span and can help you find criminal or traffic records by date or case information. If you already know the name, that usually gets you to the right place quickly. If you do not, use the portal and the circuit court page together. That is the best way to separate a real match from a similar name. Montgomery County gives you enough online access to keep the search efficient if you use the right search terms.

If you need the full file, the clerk is the next stop. Montgomery County felony records may include docket entries, hearing dates, and final disposition notes, but the paper file may still need an office request. That is normal. A request should name the person, the date range, and whether you want the docket or a copy. If a case moved through multiple courts, the clerk can often tell you where the next record sits. That can save a second trip in Clarksville.

  • Full name of the person in the case
  • Case number or date range, if available
  • Whether you are checking criminal or traffic records
  • Whether you need a docket, file, or certified copy

For forms and state guidance, use tncourts.gov/court-forms and tncourts.gov/programs/self-help-center. Those pages are useful when you want to make the request clean before you go to the office.

Montgomery County Court Records

Montgomery County court records are managed through a set of offices that work together. Circuit Court handles felony cases, while General Sessions, Juvenile Court, and Chancery Court handle other parts of the county court system. That means one search can lead to more than one office. The web inquiry service gives you a strong starting point, and the circuit clerk can help when you need the full paper trail. The county's system is broad enough to support a fast search and detailed enough to support a deeper one.

The Tennessee Public Records Act, T.C.A. § 10-7-503, still applies to public records, and the county can confirm copy charges before you request a large set of pages. If you need a broader criminal history search instead of one county record, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation background check page at tn.gov/tbi/general-information/background-check.html is the state route. If a case has been cleared, the expungement page at tn.gov/tbi/general-information/diversions-expungements.html explains the next step.

Note: The flagged online-records image was not used. The safe circuit court image and the state fallback image are the right visual mix for this page.

Help Finding Montgomery County Felony Records

If the first search does not solve it, move between the web inquiry service and the circuit court page. That is the normal Montgomery County workflow. The county gives you enough online access to get close, and the clerk gives you the record itself when you need a copy. That combination makes Clarksville one of the easier Tennessee county seats for felony records work.

Keep d6.mcgtn.org/circuit/online-court-records, mcgtn.org/circuit, and tncourts.gov open while you work. Those pages give you the best local and statewide path to Montgomery County felony records.

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