Monroe County Released Inmates
Monroe County Released Inmates searches should begin in Madisonville with the sheriff, county jail, and county records office, then move into FOIL and TBI only if the local detention trail stops answering the question. The research for Monroe County is strong on jail size, roster timing, county records, and the sheriff-side domain verified cleanly. That gives Monroe County Released Inmates a real county-first path before any statewide search needs to be opened.
Monroe County Quick Facts
Monroe County Released Inmates Search
The local starting point for Monroe County Released Inmates is the sheriff and jail at 4500 New Highway 68 in Madisonville. The research identifies sheriff Tommy Jones, chief deputy Chris White, jail administrator Albert Medina, and a jail that houses up to 364 inmates. Those details matter because Monroe County Released Inmates still has a large county detention trail that can answer a local release question before any state system needs to step in.
The same research says the jail roster updates every twenty-four hours and can display names, mugshots, charges, arresting agency, and bond information with first- and last-name searching. That gives Monroe County Released Inmates a stronger county search path than many rural counties in the project. A county search can identify the person, narrow the bond or release question, and then decide if a later FOIL step is even necessary.
That county-first order also fits the county's size and geography. Madisonville, Tellico Plains, and Vonore may each appear in the background of a release question, but the detention and records trail still comes back to the same county jail and county records office. Monroe County Released Inmates stays more precise when those local place names are treated as context and the county route still leads the search. That keeps the release trail tied to the office that handled the booking and the later records step.
These details usually improve a Monroe County Released Inmates request:
- Full legal name and alternate spellings
- Approximate booking or release date
- Any bond or arresting-agency detail
- Whether the person stayed local or moved into state custody
Monroe County Jail And Records
Monroe County Released Inmates often depends on the county records route after the first jail answer. The research identifies county records at 105 College Street South, Suite 1, Madisonville, with a seven-business-day response period and Tennessee-resident access rules. That matters because a release question can become a county records request once the jail has confirmed the local detention event.
The county route also matters because Monroe County serves Madisonville, Tellico Plains, and Vonore. Those place names may shape the background of a case, but the detention and records trail still returns to the same county jail and records office. That county-first order makes Monroe County Released Inmates more precise and easier to verify.
It also helps because Monroe County already has a structured jail operation with video visitation, commissary, and a named arresting-agency field in the roster. A searcher can move from the local roster to the jail contact and then to the records office without leaving the county trail. That is the strongest way to handle Monroe County Released Inmates before the search widens.
Note: Monroe County usually becomes clearer once the Madisonville jail and county records route are checked together.
Monroe County Released Inmates State Follow Up
After the Madisonville county trail, the next step for Monroe County Released Inmates is Tennessee FOIL. FOIL matters when the county booking appears to have moved into state custody or when the county trail no longer explains the later custody path. It should follow the county search, not replace it.
The FOIL page is the first image-backed state source available for Monroe County Released Inmates once the local jail and records route have already narrowed the search.

That state source belongs later because the county detention route should still lead first.
The broader statewide layer is the TBI criminal-history page. It helps when Monroe County Released Inmates becomes a wider records question instead of a direct custody check. Tennessee access law under T.C.A. § 10-7-503 still shapes the local route, but county detention and county records should remain first.
The TBI page is the second image-backed state source for Monroe County Released Inmates when the county path has already done its local work.

That broader state check should come after the local search, not before it.
Monroe County Public Access
Monroe County Released Inmates searches work best when they stay centered on Madisonville. That remains true even when the first clue comes from Tellico Plains or Vonore, because the detention and records trail still returns to one county system. The jail can answer the first custody question. The county records route can support the next request. Then the state tools can answer what remains.
That local-first order also fits a county with a large jail and a formal county records process. Monroe County Released Inmates becomes more precise because the search stays local long enough to gather bond detail, arresting-agency context, and county record facts before it widens into state tools. That is the safest way to handle the county record.
That local structure also helps when the first answer comes from the jail roster and the second answer needs the county records office. The roster can identify the person and the bond context. The county records route can answer the next paper-trail question. Then FOIL can answer only what the county path no longer explains. Monroe County Released Inmates is strongest when those county steps stay in order.
Monroe County also stands out because the research describes a larger jail operation than many nearby counties, along with named jail leadership, video visitation, commissary, and a roster that can show the arresting agency. Those details make the county search more than a bare phone-number step. A searcher can use the roster to narrow the person, use the jail contact to confirm the release side, and then use the county records route if the question turns into a formal request. Monroe County Released Inmates becomes more useful because the local system already carries several layers of detail.
That local detail matters when the first clue is only a charge, a bond amount, or the name of an arresting agency. Those are county-level facts, and the county trail is set up to hold them. Madisonville may be the hub, but Tellico Plains and Vonore still feed into the same detention and records chain. Monroe County Released Inmates stays grounded when those town names are treated as local context while the actual search remains centered on the county jail and county records office.
The county trail should stay in Madisonville first.
It fits Monroe County best.