Search Greene County Released Inmates

Greene County Released Inmates records should begin with the jail and workhouse trail in Greeneville, then move into the county records path, and only after that into statewide prison and criminal-history tools if the detention trail leaves county custody. The research for Greene County supports two local detention locations, a local jail phone, historical-record request guidance, and official state follow-up sources. This page keeps the search county-first so a Greene County Released Inmates search stays tied to Greene County's own detention system.

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Greene County Quick Facts

Greeneville County Seat
423-798-1802 Jail Phone
423-798-1804 Workhouse Phone
440 Combined Capacity

Greene County Released Inmates Search

The local starting point for Greene County Released Inmates is the county detention trail in Greeneville. The detailed research identifies both the jail at 120 East Depot Street and the workhouse at 817 West Summer Street, with separate phone numbers and a total capacity of 440 inmates. That matters because a Greene County Released Inmates search should begin with the local detention system that handled the county booking trail rather than starting with a statewide search.

The county path is stronger because the research gives multiple local search methods, including the official roster, VINELink, and phone contact. It also supports mail instructions, historical-record request guidance, and required information for old jail records. Those local details confirm that Greene County maintains a county-run detention trail with enough structure to answer local release questions before the search broadens.

The county trail also matters because Greene County serves more than one local community through the same detention system. The research names Greeneville, Mosheim, Baileyton, and Tusculum, which means a Greene County Released Inmates search should stay tied to the county trail even when the underlying arrest began with a different local place name inside the county.

The FOIL search page is the statewide image-backed follow-up for Greene County Released Inmates once the local detention trail points beyond county custody.

Greene County Released Inmates jail search resource

That local image file is used only as a visual for the county detention trail, while the search itself remains grounded in county-held records and official state follow-up sources.

Greene County Jail And Records Access

The local records path becomes even more useful because the research supports historical requests directly to the Greene County Sheriff, attention jail records, at 120 East Depot Street. It also says a request should include name, aliases, date of birth, date range, crime, and facility. That is a strong local records instruction set. A Greene County Released Inmates search can use those county-held records without guessing about what the local jail system needs.

The county trail also shows why a broad statewide-first answer would be weak here. Greene County has both a jail and a workhouse, separate addresses, direct phone lines, and regular roster updates. That means the local detention system has enough detail that the search should stay county-first until the county trail clearly ends or points to state custody.

The facility split matters in practice. A Greene County Released Inmates search can miss the right record if it assumes there is only one county detention location. The research makes clear that the jail and workhouse are separate local paths. That is why the page keeps the search grounded in Greeneville and asks the searcher to identify which local facility handled the detention trail.

The local request instructions are specific enough to help older searches too. When the online jail trail is no longer enough, the county records path can still be used if the request includes the right identifiers and the right facility. That keeps the search rooted in Greene County's own records system instead of defaulting to a generic statewide approach.

The county size and multi-city service area matter here too. Because several local communities feed into the same Greene County detention system, the county trail is usually the clearest way to unify the local release record.

These details usually make a Greene County Released Inmates search more precise:

  • Full legal name and alternate spellings
  • Approximate arrest, booking, or release date
  • Which local facility handled the detention trail
  • Any charge detail, date range, or county case reference

The practical order is jail or workhouse first, county records request second, then FOIL or other state tools only if the detention trail clearly leaves Greene County custody.

Greene County Released Inmates Public Access

Greene County Released Inmates records still follow Tennessee's public-records framework. Under T.C.A. § 10-7-503, county records are generally open unless another statute limits access. In practice, that means the jail trail, workhouse trail, county records request path, and official state tools can all matter, but they should be checked in the right order.

The best order in Greene County is local detention first, county records path second, FOIL third if the detention trail leaves county custody. That keeps the page aligned with the research and avoids turning a Greeneville county search into a generic statewide answer too early. The local detention system is strong enough that most release questions should start with the county jail or workhouse trail before the search widens.

That local-first order matters even more when the older record depends on knowing which Greene County facility handled the detention trail at the time.

It also matters in newer cases, where the county jail and workhouse split can make the local trail clearer than any broader statewide match.

That facility detail is often the key local clue.

Note: A Greene County Released Inmates result often becomes clearer once the county jail or workhouse record is paired with a direct county records request for older or more specific detail.

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