Find Medina County Warrant Records

Medina County warrant records are stored at the courthouse in Hondo, Texas. The county has two district courts in the 198th and 73rd Judicial Districts that hear felony cases. Misdemeanor matters go through the county court. You can look up active warrants by contacting the Sheriff's Office or by visiting the clerk offices in person. The Texas DPS also runs an online criminal history search that pulls records from all 254 Texas counties, including Medina. Warrant data in this county is public, and the process to get it is straightforward. Whether you need to check on a specific name or pull up a full case file, the local offices and state tools can help.

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Medina County Overview

53,200Population
HondoCounty Seat
198th, 73rdJudicial Districts
County & DistrictCourt Clerks

Medina County Sheriff Warrant Records

The Medina County Sheriff's Office tracks all active warrants in the county. They are the central point for warrant checks. Call 830-741-6040 during business hours to ask about a name.

The warrants division keeps data on every open warrant from Medina County courts. Records include the person's name, what they are charged with, the bond, and the issuing court. The sheriff also works with other agencies when a person with a Medina County warrant is found in a different county. Extradition is coordinated through this office. All warrant data is public under Texas Government Code Chapter 552, so you can ask for it without giving a reason.

OfficeMedina County Sheriff's Office
Phone830-741-6040
HoursMonday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM
Websitemedinacountysheriff.com

Note: You can check warrant status over the phone during normal office hours.

The Sheriff's Office gives you the fastest answer. Just call and ask. For detailed court records, use the clerk offices at the courthouse in Hondo.

The Medina County Clerk keeps misdemeanor records. The District Clerk handles felony cases from the 198th and 73rd Judicial District Courts. You can search by defendant name or case number at either office. Copies are $1.00 per page. Certified copies run more.

Online, the Texas DPS Criminal History search covers Medina County. It costs $3.00 per name. You set up an account, buy search credits, and run the check. The system pulls from the Computerized Criminal History database that gets data from every county. Check the DPS Crime Records page for details on what information you need to provide.

Medina County Warrant Records and Legal Process

The 198th and 73rd District Courts handle felony cases. Indictments, pleas, sentencing, and case dispositions all flow through the District Clerk. The District Attorney's Office prosecutes these cases. They work with police and the sheriff on case prep and present cases to the grand jury.

The County Attorney prosecutes misdemeanor cases. Class A and B misdemeanors, juvenile matters, and some civil cases fall under this office. The County Attorney also provides legal counsel to other county officials. Both offices generate warrant records and case files that the public can access through the clerks.

Texas law, specifically Chapter 15 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, says an arrest warrant must include the person's name, the charge, and a magistrate's signature. A Medina County warrant is valid everywhere in Texas. Any peace officer can serve it regardless of where they find the person.

Justice Courts and Constables in Medina County

The Justice of the Peace courts handle Class C misdemeanors, small claims, and magistrate functions. JP courts issue arrest warrants for traffic offenses, ordinance violations, and school attendance issues. They also set bonds and conduct initial hearings.

Medina County constables serve warrants and civil process in their precincts. They handle citations, subpoenas, protective orders, and eviction notices. Each precinct covers a set area within the county. The constables work closely with the Sheriff's Office on warrant service, especially for cases that cross precinct lines.

Note: Constable offices can tell you if a warrant has been served in their precinct.

State Warrant Search Tools for Medina County

Several state databases can help you find Medina County records. The Texas DPS criminal history system is the main one. The TDCJ tracks people in the state prison system. The Texas Judicial Branch has court structure details. The Attorney General helps with public records issues.

These state tools supplement what you can get from Medina County directly. They are especially useful when offices are closed or when you want to search multiple counties at once. The DPS online portal works 24 hours a day. You just need an account and search credits. For prison records, the TDCJ site lets you search by name or TDCJ number at no charge.

Medina County sits just west of San Antonio and Bexar County. People who live in the western suburbs sometimes have cases that fall in Medina County courts instead of Bexar. If you are not sure which county a warrant came from, check both. The Medina County courthouse in Hondo has all the local files. You can mail a request with the person's full name and a check for copy fees. Standard copies are $1.00 per page. Certified copies cost more. The clerks follow the same retention rules as every other county in the state, and older records are still available from the archive.

Nearby Counties

These counties are next to Medina County. Check the right county based on where the charge was filed.

Below is a view of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Chapter 15, which sets the legal rules for arrest warrants in Medina County and across Texas.

Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Chapter 15 arrest warrant statutes for Medina County

This statute covers how warrants are issued, what they must include, and how they are served by law enforcement.

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