Search Henry County Released Inmates
Henry County Released Inmates records should be checked through the Paris correctional facility and county public-records path first, then through statewide prison and criminal-history tools only if the detention trail moves beyond county custody. The research for Henry County supports a local correctional facility address, named jail command staff, a public records coordinator, and official Tennessee follow-up sources. This page keeps a Henry County Released Inmates search tied to the county detention system instead of widening too early.
Henry County Quick Facts
Henry County Released Inmates Search
The local starting point for Henry County Released Inmates is the correctional facility at 210 Forrest Heights Road in Paris. The research identifies Sheriff Josh Frey, Chief Deputy Scott Wyrick, Jail Administrator Lt. Daniel Powell, and a facility that averages about 170 inmates inside a 204-inmate system. That level of detail matters because it shows a real local detention structure, not just a thin directory listing. A Henry County Released Inmates search should begin with that county path before any statewide result is used.
The county trail is also more developed than a basic jail lookup suggests. The research identifies patrol, corrections, criminal investigations, K9 functions, jail ministry, and in-house adult education. Those details do not answer a release question by themselves, but they do show that the detention system is active and layered. In Henry County Released Inmates work, that usually means the local correctional facility and county records route can answer more of the early search questions than a state-level database can.
The Henry County correctional facility overview is the strongest local web source in the research, while the FOIL search page remains the later state step for Henry County Released Inmates after the local detention trail has been narrowed.

That statewide source helps after the Paris correctional facility trail has already established whether the record still belongs in county custody.
Henry County Jail And Records Access
The county records route is practical because the research identifies County Mayor John Ridgeway as the public records coordinator, with requests handled through 101 West Washington Street in Paris. The research says requests can be made in writing, in person, or by mail, with a seven-business-day response period. Those details show that a Henry County Released Inmates search can continue through a local records process even when the public jail trail is incomplete.
The detention details also help frame the search. The research says visits are video recording visits only, inmate mail is searched for contraband, and the county maintains a most-wanted list with descriptive and charge information. Those facts show that Henry County manages a structured detention and public-information system. For Henry County Released Inmates, the most useful path is usually the local correctional facility first, then the county records coordinator, and then the state step if the detention path leaves county control.
The Henry County jail records resource is paired here with the local detention image because it aligns with the research and avoids relying on lower-quality sources that should not be used in the page copy.

That county records layer helps when the search needs local detention context before any statewide follow-up is used.
These details usually make a Henry County Released Inmates search more precise:
- Full legal name and alternate spellings
- Approximate booking, housing, or release date
- Any local charge, bond, or case reference
- Whether the person remained in county custody or moved into a different system
Those details help Paris county staff distinguish the right record and reduce confusion when a name alone is not enough.
Henry County Released Inmates Public Access
Henry 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 correctional facility trail, county records route, and FOIL system can all matter, but the local county path should come first.
The best order in Henry County is local detention first, county records second, FOIL third if the detention trail leaves county custody. That keeps the page aligned with the research and avoids turning a Paris county search into a generic statewide answer too early. It also helps answer the practical question of whether the release happened from the county correctional facility or after a later move into another custody level.
Public access in Henry County is most useful when it stays close to the local detention record. The county trail can establish that the booking happened, help narrow the release period, and clarify whether the search should remain local or move to the state layer. That is why Henry County Released Inmates remains a county-first page built around the actual correctional facility and county records process described in the research.
That local-first order also matches the way the facility is described in the research. Named jail leadership, video-only visits, and a defined county records route give the Paris detention trail more value than a broad prison search in the opening step. The Henry County path should do that first work.
The same point applies when a search starts from a charge rumor, a most-wanted entry, or a family report of release. The county detention and records path can sort out whether the person was actually released from the Paris facility or later moved into another custody level. That keeps the Henry County search grounded.
Local correctional detail matters here.
Note: A Henry County Released Inmates result often becomes clearer once the correctional facility trail and county public-records route are checked together.