Bailey County Warrant Records
Bailey County warrant records are available through the courthouse and Sheriff's Office in Muleshoe, Texas. This West Texas county near the New Mexico border handles criminal records through a County Clerk for misdemeanors and a District Clerk for felony cases in the 108th Judicial District. The Sheriff's Office tracks all active warrants and can be reached at 806-272-4500. You can search by name, case number, or date of filing at the clerk offices. Staff will help you find what you need. State-level tools from the Texas DPS also pull from Bailey County data, so you have more than one path to look up warrant records and criminal history information.
Bailey County Overview
Bailey County Sheriff Warrant Division
The Bailey County Sheriff's Office Warrants Division handles all active warrants issued by local courts. They verify warrant status for the public and for other law enforcement agencies. Call 806-272-4500 during business hours. You can also walk in during regular office hours.
The Sheriff's Office logs every warrant it receives from the courts. Officers work to find and arrest the person named. They coordinate with other agencies across the region and the state for fugitive cases. Under Chapter 15 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, any Texas peace officer can execute a valid arrest warrant. Bailey County warrants are enforceable statewide. The Sheriff also runs extradition when someone is caught outside Texas.
Warrant data from the Sheriff includes the defendant's name, the charges, the bond amount, the issuing court, and whether the warrant is still active or has been served or recalled. This is all public record.
| Office | Bailey County Sheriff's Office |
|---|---|
| Address | Muleshoe, TX |
| Phone | 806-272-4500 |
| Hours | Monday through Friday, regular business hours |
How to Search Bailey County Warrant Records
Searching for warrant records in Bailey County can be done a few ways. A phone call to the Sheriff's Office is the fastest route. Provide the full name and they will check. Going to the courthouse in Muleshoe is another option. The clerks can help you pull up records.
The Bailey County Clerk serves as the official records custodian for misdemeanor criminal cases. You can search by defendant name, case number, or filing date. The office charges $1.00 per page for standard copies with added fees for certified copies as set by Texas Government Code. The clerk also manages the county's records program and keeps vital records.
The District Clerk handles felony records from the 108th Judicial District Court. Files include indictments, judgments, plea agreements, sentencing orders, and all motions filed during the case. Some records may be on the Texas e-Filing system or the county's online records portal.
The Texas DPS criminal history portal lets you run a statewide search for a small fee. This covers all Texas counties including Bailey. The DPS Crime Records page has more details.
Bailey County Court System and Criminal Records
Bailey County uses the 108th District Court for felony cases. The District Clerk keeps all the paperwork. Misdemeanor cases go through the County Court. The County Clerk stores those files. Justice of the Peace courts handle Class C misdemeanors, truancy cases, and small civil matters. JP courts also issue arrest warrants for minor offenses and hold initial hearings.
The District Attorney's Office prosecutes felonies in Bailey County. They work with law enforcement on criminal investigations, present cases to the grand jury, and handle criminal appeals. The office also deals with asset forfeiture tied to criminal activity. Victim services are available for people with cases in the system. The County Attorney prosecutes Class A and B misdemeanors and juvenile matters. The County Attorney also gives legal advice to county officials and departments.
Note: The District Attorney and County Attorney handle different levels of cases, so contact the right one for your situation.
Constable and JP Warrants in Bailey County
Bailey County has multiple constable precincts. Constables serve civil process and execute warrants within their areas. They handle citations, subpoenas, protective orders, and eviction notices. They work with the Sheriff on warrant service.
The JP courts issue warrants for Class C misdemeanors. These include traffic citations, code violations, school attendance issues, and other minor offenses. Each precinct has an elected constable who serves these warrants. JP court records are public. You can contact the specific precinct to check on a warrant from a JP case. The constable can tell you if it has been served and what the current status is.
State Resources for Bailey County Warrants
Texas state agencies provide additional ways to search for Bailey County warrant records. The Texas DPS runs the central criminal records database. The TDCJ keeps records on inmates and people on parole. The Office of Court Administration handles the court system statewide.
If you run into trouble getting records from a Bailey County office, the Texas Attorney General can help with open records complaints. They also run victim notification programs. These state tools supplement the local offices in Muleshoe. Use them when you need to cast a wider net or verify records from outside Bailey County. The local offices remain the best source for the most current, county-specific warrant data.
Bailey County Warrant Process
Warrants in Bailey County work like they do across Texas. A complaint gets filed with a magistrate. The magistrate reviews the evidence. If probable cause is there, the magistrate signs the warrant. The Sheriff's Office gets the warrant and starts working to serve it.
The warrant stays open until the person is arrested, the court recalls it, or the case is resolved some other way. Bond is set when the warrant is issued. Higher charges mean higher bonds. Bailey County is near the New Mexico state line, so the Sheriff sometimes works with law enforcement across the border on fugitive cases. Within Texas, any peace officer can arrest someone on a valid Bailey County warrant. Out-of-state cases go through extradition. The process takes time but ensures that people with active warrants are brought back to face the charges.
Bailey County does not have a local screenshot available, but the Texas DPS Crime Records page shown below is a key state resource for searching criminal history and warrant records statewide.
This state tool lets you run a name-based search that covers records from all 254 Texas counties, including Bailey County.
Nearby Counties
Bailey County is in the western part of the Texas Panhandle near New Mexico. These nearby counties each have their own warrant records.