Search Haywood County Released Inmates
Haywood County Released Inmates records should be checked through the Brownsville sheriff and jail trail first, then through the county public-records route, and only after that through statewide prison and criminal-history tools if the detention trail leaves county custody. The research for Haywood County supports separate office and jail addresses, a named public records coordinator, local mail rules, and official Tennessee follow-up sources. This page keeps a Haywood County Released Inmates search tied to the actual county detention path instead of turning it into a generic statewide lookup.
Haywood County Quick Facts
Haywood County Released Inmates Search
The local starting point for Haywood County Released Inmates is the sheriff and jail system in Brownsville. The research identifies the sheriff's office at 100 South Dupree and the jail at 200 South Dupree, with Sheriff Billy Garrett Jr. leading a county structure that includes patrol, investigations, corrections, administration, and dispatch. That local split matters. A Haywood County Released Inmates search should start with the actual county detention system that handled the booking event rather than with a wide state search.
The county trail is stronger because the research also identifies Brownsville, Stanton, and Nutbush as the communities feeding into the same county detention path. A person may be arrested in one place and still move through the same county jail process. That is why a Haywood County Released Inmates search stays county-centered even when the initial arrest story starts with a city or a neighborhood name instead of with the county jail itself.
The sheriff side also gives this page a stronger local footing than a bare directory entry would. The Haywood County Sheriff's Office reflects the actual county law-enforcement structure behind the jail trail, while the FOIL search page remains the later state step for Haywood County Released Inmates once the local custody path suggests a move beyond county detention.

That statewide source helps after the Brownsville detention and records path have already narrowed the local booking and release trail.
Haywood County Jail And Records Access
The county records route is practical because the research identifies Tonja Stocking-Hines as the public records coordinator, with requests handled through 1 North Washington Avenue in Brownsville. The same research says the request method is written, in person, or by mail, with a seven-business-day response window. Those details matter because a Haywood County Released Inmates search may start online but still depend on a county records request when the public jail view does not explain enough.
The detention details help shape the search. The research says all inmate mail is searched for contraband and that the jail mail address uses the 200 South Dupree location. That confirms the jail is an active county-managed facility with a real local records trail behind it. In Haywood County Released Inmates work, those county details are more useful than a vague statewide result because they tie the search to the correct Brownsville detention path.
The Haywood County jail records overview is the local image-backed source used here because it tracks the county detention path described in the research and supports the county-first search flow. The page works best when the local jail trail is checked before the state layer is used.

That county records layer helps when the search needs local detention context before any statewide follow-up step is taken.
A careful search usually becomes more accurate when the request includes a few grounding details:
- Full legal name and alternate spellings
- Approximate arrest, booking, or release date
- Any local charge detail or county case reference
- Whether the detention trail remained county-managed or later moved to state custody
Those details help Brownsville county staff distinguish the right record from a similar name and reduce the chance that a Haywood County Released Inmates search drifts into the wrong person or the wrong custody level.
Haywood County Released Inmates Public Access
Haywood County Released Inmates records still fit within 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 sheriff, jail trail, county records coordinator, and FOIL system can all matter, but they should not be used in a random order.
The best order in Haywood 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 Brownsville county search into a broad statewide answer too early. The county-first method is especially useful when the key question is whether the person was released directly from county custody or transferred elsewhere later.
Public access questions in Haywood County also tend to be practical. People usually need to know whether a release record is still local, whether the county jail handled the full detention period, or whether the search should move into a state corrections system. The county detention and records process helps answer those questions in order. That is why Haywood County Released Inmates remains a county-first page, with FOIL used only after the local path points beyond county custody.
That same county-first order is useful because Brownsville, Stanton, and Nutbush all feed the same detention trail. A local county record can often sort out release timing or transfer status before a state search becomes necessary. That makes the Haywood County Released Inmates path more accurate than a broad statewide search that skips the county jail context.
Note: A Haywood County Released Inmates result often becomes clearer once the county jail trail and county public-records route are checked together.