Potter County Warrant Records
Potter County warrant records are filed and kept at the courthouse in Amarillo, Texas. The Sheriff's Office runs the warrants division and can tell you if someone has an active warrant in the county. Potter County uses a split clerk system where the County Clerk holds misdemeanor case files and the District Clerk keeps felony records. Courts in this county span the 47th, 108th, 136th, 181st, 251st, 320th, and 340th Judicial Districts. Anyone can request warrant data under Texas open records law. You can search by phone, in person, or through state tools online.
Potter County Overview
Potter County Sheriff Warrant Records
The Potter County Sheriff's Office keeps all active warrants that come out of local courts. This is the main place to check. Call them at 806-379-2200 to ask about a warrant. Staff can run a name through the system and let you know if something is on file. You can also go to the office in Amarillo during regular hours.
Warrant records in Potter County show key details about each case. Each entry lists the person's name, the charges they face, any bond amount set by the court, and which judge signed the warrant. You will also see if the warrant is still active, if it was already served, or if the court recalled it. The Sheriff's Office works with other law enforcement groups to track down people with open warrants. They handle extraditions too when a person with a Potter County warrant gets picked up in another part of Texas or out of state. Under Texas Government Code Chapter 552, this information is open to the public. You do not need to give a reason when you ask for warrant data.
| Office | Potter County Sheriff's Office - Warrants Division |
|---|---|
| Phone | 806-379-2200 |
| Hours | Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM |
Note: The sheriff's phone line for warrants may have a separate extension, so ask for the warrants division when you call.
How to Look Up Potter County Warrants
A phone call is the fastest way to check. Give the Sheriff's Office the full legal name of the person you want to look up. They will search their files and give you an answer. Walk-ins work too. Go to the sheriff's office in Amarillo and ask at the front desk.
State-level tools also cover Potter County. The Texas DPS Crime Records portal lets you run a name-based check for criminal history across all Texas counties. This can pull up arrests, charges, and open warrants tied to Potter County. There is a fee for the search. The DPS Crime Records page explains what you need to get started and what the results will look like.
For court case files, the Potter County District Clerk keeps all felony records from the 47th, 108th, 136th, 181st, 251st, 320th, and 340th District Courts. The County Clerk stores misdemeanor files. Both offices let you look up cases by defendant name or case number. Copies run $1.00 per page. Certified copies cost a bit more, as set by the Texas Government Code.
Potter County Court Warrants
Arrest warrants in Potter County must meet the rules in Chapter 15 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. A judge or magistrate signs each one after finding probable cause. The warrant names the person, states the offense, and gives law enforcement the power to make an arrest. Once it is active, any peace officer in Texas can serve it.
The District Attorney's Office prosecutes all felony cases in Potter County. They work with local police and state agencies on investigations and grand jury cases. The County Attorney handles Class A and B misdemeanors and juvenile matters. Both offices play a part in building the case files that lead to warrants. If you are a victim of a crime in Potter County, the DA's office has a victim services team that can give you updates on a case.
Justice of the Peace courts in Potter County handle Class C misdemeanors. These are lower-level offenses like traffic tickets, city code violations, and truancy. JP courts issue their own arrest warrants for people who skip court or fail to pay fines. Even though these are minor charges, the warrants are real and law enforcement will act on them.
Constable Warrants in Potter County
Potter County has several constable precincts. Constables serve civil process and help with warrant service in their area. They handle citations, subpoenas, protective orders, and eviction notices. They also work with the Sheriff's Office when warrants need to be served in a certain part of the county.
Each constable precinct covers a set area within Potter County. If you want to know about a warrant being served in a specific neighborhood or part of Amarillo, the constable for that precinct may have details. They stay in contact with the Sheriff's Office and local police to make sure warrants get executed. This kind of cooperation keeps things from falling through the cracks.
Note: Constable offices can confirm whether a warrant has been served within their precinct but the main warrants list stays with the sheriff.
State Resources for Potter County Records
If you are not sure where a warrant was filed or need to cast a wider net, state agencies can help. The Texas Department of Public Safety is the top state source for criminal records and warrant data. Their system covers every county. The Texas Department of Criminal Justice tracks inmates and parolees from across the state, and that includes anyone sentenced out of Potter County.
The Texas Judicial Branch runs the court system statewide. You can find court structure info and records access details through their site. The Texas Attorney General handles public records requests and can help if a local office gives you trouble getting warrant data. Under the Texas Public Information Act, you have a right to ask for these records, and agencies must respond.
Cities in Potter County
Amarillo is the biggest city in Potter County. Warrant records for people living in Amarillo go through the Potter County court system. Some parts of Amarillo also fall in Randall County.
Nearby Counties
These counties sit next to Potter County. If a warrant was not filed here, it may have come from a neighboring county instead.
The screenshot below shows the Texas Department of Public Safety website, which offers statewide criminal history and warrant search tools covering Potter County records.
You can use this site to reach the DPS crime records portal and run checks for warrants and criminal history tied to Potter County.