Search Utah 24 Hour Booking Records

Utah 24 hour booking records show recent arrest and jail data from all 29 counties. Each county sheriff posts booking rosters that list names, charges, bail amounts, and dates for those booked into local jails. The Utah Bureau of Criminal Identification also keeps criminal history files for the whole state. You can look up 24 hour booking records through county jail rosters, the state court system, or by filing a records request with the right agency. This page covers the best state and county tools for finding recent booking records in Utah.

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Utah 24 Hour Booking Quick Facts

29 County Jails
24 Hours Probable Cause Review
$20 BCI Record Fee
Public GRAMA Access

Utah 24 Hour Booking Records

The Bureau of Criminal Identification is Utah's central source for criminal history and booking data. BCI is part of the Utah Department of Public Safety. The office sits at 4315 South 2700 West Suite 1300 in Taylorsville. Hours run 8 am to 5 pm on weekdays. Weekends and state holidays are closed. BCI collects arrest and 24 hour booking records from law enforcement across all 29 counties in Utah. The bureau stores this data and shares it with agencies that have a lawful purpose under state code. Due to laws passed in the 2025 session, the Right of Access fee for a Utah criminal record is now $20. Fingerprint services also cost $20. You must book an appointment for prints at BCI.

The Utah Bureau of Criminal Identification website provides access to 24 hour booking and criminal history records for the state.

Utah Bureau of Criminal Identification 24 hour booking records

BCI serves as the central hub for all arrest and booking data across Utah.

Access to full BCI files is limited. Only certain agencies can pull records. Under Utah Code Title 53, qualifying entities may request criminal history for purposes like child welfare, fiduciary trusts, national security, and vulnerable adult care. Criminal penalties and civil liability apply to anyone who gets or shares BCI records without legal authority in Utah.

You can request your own Utah criminal history through BCI. Walk in with a valid government photo ID. Utah Driving Privilege Cards are not accepted. The cost is $15 for an in person check. Cash, checks, VISA, and MasterCard are accepted. Mail requests work too. Visit the BCI criminal history records page to download the application. Fill it out and mail it with your fee to BCI at 3888 West 5400 South, Salt Lake City, Utah 84129. This gives you access to your own arrest and 24 hour booking history across Utah.

Find Utah 24 Hour Booking

Most counties in Utah post jail rosters online. These rosters show recent 24 hour booking data. Salt Lake County runs one of the most complete systems in the state. The roster lets you search by name, booking number, permanent number, or state ID. Results display gender, age, weight, race, charges, and bail amounts. Booking date is included. Salt Lake County does not show booking photos on the public site to prevent misuse on other websites. Utah County also provides detailed 24 hour booking data online. Its roster shows full name, arrest date and time, arresting agency, booking date and time, booking number, status, height, weight, and all charges. Each charge lists the court, case number, bail, and a description. Booking photos show for 30 days after booking in Utah County.

The BCI criminal history records page explains how Utah residents can obtain their own arrest and booking records by mail or in person.

Utah criminal history records page for 24 hour booking search

Both state and county tools help with finding 24 hour booking records in Utah.

County sheriff offices accept GRAMA requests for booking records. Under Utah Code ยง 63G-2-301, a jail booking photograph is a public record in Utah. Arrest warrants after issuance are public too. Due to House Bill 228, some counties removed mugshot images from public online display. The standard GRAMA response time is 10 business days across Utah. You can submit requests in person, by mail, or online at many agencies.

Utah 24 hour booking rosters typically include:

  • Full name of the person booked
  • Booking date and time
  • Charges and bail amounts
  • Arresting agency
  • Current custody status

Utah Arrest and Booking Steps

Utah follows set rules for arrests and 24 hour booking. Under Utah Code Title 77, daytime means 6 am to 10 pm. Nighttime means 10 pm to 6 am. A felony arrest warrant allows arrest at any hour. A misdemeanor warrant allows nighttime arrest only in limited cases. The person must be on a public highway, in a public place, or found by an officer during a separate investigation. After arrest, the person goes to the county jail for booking. The 24 hour booking process captures personal details, fingerprints, photographs, and the charges filed against them. All 29 county jails in Utah handle initial booking for arrests in their area.

The Utah Department of Corrections tracks individuals in state custody after sentencing in Utah.

Utah Department of Corrections 24 hour booking and offender search

State corrections data is separate from county 24 hour booking rosters.

A judge must review probable cause for every warrantless arrest within 24 hours. Under Utah Rules of Criminal Procedure 7(c)(1), district court judges check probable cause statements twice each day. This happens in the morning and afternoon. The review occurs on weekdays and weekends. If the judge finds probable cause, a bail decision follows right away. The Salt Lake City Police Department also conducts documented arrest reviews before any jail booking. This 24 hour review cycle is central to how arrests are processed in Utah.

Note: Utah law enforcement uses the Utah Criminal Justice Information System to process warrant and booking data in real time statewide.

Access Utah 24 Hour Booking Data

The Government Records Access and Management Act controls access to public records in Utah. GRAMA balances the public's right to know with individual privacy rights. Under this law, arrest warrants after issuance are public. Search warrants become public after execution. Jail booking records are not exempted under GRAMA. Because they lack a specific exemption, they are presumed public in Utah. The state legislature designed GRAMA to favor public access when competing interests carry equal weight. That means 24 hour booking records are available to anyone who asks in most cases across Utah.

The GRAMA statute covers the full rules for accessing 24 hour booking and other government records in Utah.

Utah GRAMA statute for 24 hour booking records access

GRAMA applies to booking records held by every county and city agency in Utah.

Filing a GRAMA request is straightforward. Include your name, the records you want, a date range, and your contact details. Most agencies respond within 10 business days. Fees may apply for staff time and copies. Send requests to the county sheriff or city police department. The Utah State Archives provides guidance on GRAMA compliance and records management training for government staff across Utah.

Utah 24 Hour Booking Court Records

The Utah Courts XChange portal provides access to court records from district courts across Utah. XChange holds felony, misdemeanor, and infraction records. The system requires a subscription. Filing data updates weekly. Disposition data updates weekly too. An archive source contains older records from county courts in Utah. These include disposition details, date of birth, alias, and basic demographics. Court records connect to 24 hour booking data because most charges begin with an arrest at the county level in Utah.

The Utah Courts XChange system links court case records to 24 hour booking charges from across the state.

Utah Courts XChange portal for 24 hour booking court records

XChange ties court outcomes back to the original arrest and booking events in Utah.

Court records show case numbers, charges, and outcomes. They are separate from jail rosters but trace back to the same booking. After a 24 hour booking, the case moves through the court system in Utah. You can track case progress through XChange or by contacting the county court clerk.

Utah Warrant Search

The Utah Statewide Warrants file lets the public search for active warrants across Utah. The Department of Public Safety runs this system. Warrant data flows from courts to the Utah Criminal Justice Information System through electronic transfer. You need both a first and last name to search. Officers use UCJIS terminals with assigned usernames and security tokens to process warrants. Judges rotate on call 24 hours a day, 7 days a week for warrant reviews. About 7 to 8 judges handle the on call rotation at any given time across Utah.

The Garfield County warrant search page links to the Utah statewide warrants file for 24 hour booking and warrant lookups.

Utah statewide warrants search for 24 hour booking records

Warrant records update as courts enter and remove data across Utah.

VINELink is the national victim notification network. It covers Utah. You can search for inmates and sign up for custody status updates. VINELink sends alerts by phone, email, or TTY device. The service is free and runs 24 hours a day. It works alongside the 24 hour booking system in Utah to help victims stay informed about offender status.

Note: Warrant data may lag because courts must enter and remove records on their own schedule across Utah.

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Browse Utah 24 Hour Booking by County

Each of the 29 counties in Utah runs its own jail and booking system. Pick a county below to find local 24 hour booking resources and contact details.

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24 Hour Booking in Utah Cities

City arrests in Utah are processed through the county jail. Pick a city below to find 24 hour booking resources for that area.

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