Edwards County Warrant Records
Edwards County warrant records are held by the Sheriff's Office and the clerk offices at the courthouse in Rocksprings, Texas. This rural county in the Texas Hill Country uses two separate clerk offices to manage criminal case files. The County Clerk handles misdemeanor records, while the District Clerk stores felony case files from the 83rd Judicial District Court. You can check for active warrants by calling the Sheriff's Office or by stopping by in person. State tools from the Texas Department of Public Safety also let you search for criminal history tied to Edwards County. Most warrant records are public and can be looked up by name or case number at the local offices.
Edwards County Overview
Edwards County Sheriff Warrant Services
The Edwards County Sheriff's Office runs the warrant division for this county. All active warrants go through this office. They keep track of open warrants and can tell you if one exists for a given name. You can call at 830-683-6121 to ask about a warrant during regular work hours. Walk-ins are also welcome at the office in Rocksprings.
The Sheriff's Office works with courts and other agencies to serve warrants across the county. They also coordinate with law enforcement from other parts of Texas when a fugitive is in Edwards County. Warrant data usually includes the person's name, the charges filed, the bond amount set by the court, and which judge issued the warrant. Under Texas Government Code Chapter 552, most of this data is public. Anyone can ask for it.
The office handles both criminal warrants and civil process. They serve papers from the district court, county court, and justice courts. If you are not sure where a warrant came from, the Sheriff's Office is the best place to start since they track warrants from all courts in Edwards County.
| Office | Edwards County Sheriff's Office |
|---|---|
| Location | Rocksprings, TX 78880 |
| Phone | 830-683-6121 |
| Hours | Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM |
Note: Hours may shift on state holidays so call ahead to confirm.
Search Edwards County Warrant Records
There are a few ways to look up warrant records in Edwards County. The most direct path is to call the Sheriff's Office. Give them a full name and they can check for active warrants. You can also go to the courthouse in Rocksprings and ask the clerk to pull up case files.
The Texas Department of Public Safety runs a statewide criminal history search tool at publicsite.dps.texas.gov. This search covers arrests and convictions from all Texas counties, including Edwards County. There is a small fee for the online check. The DPS Crime Records page has more details on what you need to run a search and what types of records come back in the results.
For court records tied to specific cases, the Edwards County District Clerk keeps felony files from the 83rd Judicial District Court. The County Clerk stores misdemeanor records. Both offices are in the courthouse in Rocksprings. You can search by defendant name, case number, or date of filing. Standard copies cost $1.00 per page, and certified copies run a bit more based on state statute.
Warrant Records and Court Files
Warrant records in Edwards County come from several courts. The 83rd Judicial District Court handles felony cases. These include serious crimes like aggravated assault, drug offenses, and theft over a certain dollar amount. The County Court deals with Class A and B misdemeanors. Justice of the Peace courts handle Class C cases like traffic tickets and minor code violations.
Under Texas law, a judge must sign an arrest warrant based on probable cause. Chapter 15 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure lays out the rules for how warrants get issued and served. The warrant has to name the person, describe the offense, and be signed by a magistrate. Once it is active, any peace officer in Texas can serve it. The District Attorney's Office works with law enforcement to build cases and present them to the grand jury for felony charges.
The County Attorney handles misdemeanor prosecution in Edwards County. This office reviews cases from law enforcement, prepares warrant requests, and takes cases through county court. They also provide legal counsel to county officials and the commissioners court on various legal matters that come up.
Note: Felony and misdemeanor warrant records are stored in different clerk offices.
Edwards County Constable and JP Courts
Edwards County has constable precincts that cover different parts of the county. Constables serve civil process and also execute criminal warrants within their area. They handle citations, subpoenas, protective orders, and eviction notices on top of warrant service.
The Justice of the Peace courts in Edwards County handle Class C misdemeanor cases, civil matters under $10,000, and truancy cases. JP courts can issue arrest warrants for minor offenses and hold initial hearings where bonds are set. Each precinct has its own elected constable who serves warrants and papers issued by the Justice of the Peace. If you need to check on a warrant from a JP court, you can contact the constable for that precinct or call the JP court clerk directly.
Constable offices coordinate with the Sheriff's Office on warrant execution across the county. The warrants issued by Justice Courts cover traffic citations, city ordinance violations, school attendance issues, and other minor criminal offenses. These are separate from the felony and misdemeanor warrants handled by the district and county courts.
State-Level Warrant Search Tools
Texas has several state tools that can help you find warrant records tied to Edwards County. The Texas Department of Public Safety is the main agency for criminal records at the state level. Their online portal lets you run a name-based search for criminal history.
The Texas Department of Criminal Justice keeps records on people who are or were in the state prison system. If someone from Edwards County was sent to prison, their records show up in this database. The Office of Court Administration oversees the court system statewide and can point you to the right court records portal. The Texas Attorney General's Office handles certain public records requests and runs victim notification programs that can be helpful.
These state tools are useful when you are not sure which county a warrant came from. They pull from statewide data. For records specific to Edwards County, the local offices in Rocksprings are still the best bet. But the state systems give you a wider view of someone's criminal history across all of Texas.
Nearby Counties
These counties border Edwards County. If you need warrant records from a neighboring area, check where the offense took place. Warrants are filed in the county where charges were brought.
The screenshot below shows the Texas Department of Public Safety website, which provides statewide criminal history search tools that include Edwards County records.
You can use this state portal to run a name-based search that covers warrant and arrest records from all Texas counties including Edwards County.