Fredericksburg Recent Arrests

Fredericksburg recent arrests come from a small set of city offices that book, hold, and try people picked up inside the City of Fredericksburg. The Fredericksburg Police Department writes the first incident report after a stop. A regional jail holds inmates booked into the city under a long-running contract. The Circuit Court Clerk holds the formal case file once a charge moves through the system. You can search Fredericksburg recent arrests by name, by date, or by case number through these offices and the state court portal. Most steps are free and most data stays open to the public.

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Fredericksburg Recent Arrests Overview

~28KCity Population
3Main Agencies
24/7Booking Intake
PublicCourt Records

Fredericksburg Police Arrest Records

The Fredericksburg Police Department is the first stop for Fredericksburg recent arrests. Officers patrol the city day and night. They book each person at the local jail after a custodial stop. The agency sits at 2200 Cowan Boulevard, Fredericksburg, VA 22401. Staff at the records desk pull incident reports for the public. You can ask for an arrest record, a crash report, or a copy of a daily blotter. Plain copies are cheap. Some pages get redacted under state law.

Crime stats and incident maps may show up on the city site. The Fredericksburg Police page lists each call type and the block where it happened. To pull a full report on a person, you go to the records desk or send a written FOIA request. The agency has five working days to reply under Va. Code § 2.2-3704. Visit fredericksburgva.gov/189/Police.

Active police case files stay closed while the work goes on under Va. Code § 2.2-3706. Once a case ends, the records open up for public view.

See more from Rappahannock Regional Jail below.

Rappahannock Regional Jail for Fredericksburg recent arrests

The regional jail page above lists the inmate lookup, visit rules, and money drop steps tied to Fredericksburg recent arrests.

Rappahannock Regional Jail

The Rappahannock Regional Jail houses inmates from the City of Fredericksburg under a long-running contract. Staff log the charge, the bond, the next court date, and the housing unit for each person in custody. You can call the jail to ask if a person is held there. Visit rrj.state.va.us for the inmate lookup, visit rules, and money drop steps.

Custody data tracks the path of each person from book-in to release. The intake clerk runs a name check against state and federal warrants. New bookings tied to Fredericksburg recent arrests join the daily roster fast. Average stays vary by charge. Most low-level cases clear out fast.

Note: Regional jails can hold inmates from many localities, so the daily roster is not a Fredericksburg-only list of recent arrests.

Fredericksburg Circuit Court Records

The Clerk of the Circuit Court keeps the formal case file for Fredericksburg recent arrests that move past the General District Court. The Clerk holds more than 800 statutory duties under Virginia law. Criminal indictments, plea sheets, and final orders go in this file. Visit fredericksburgva.gov/190/Circuit-Court-Clerk to ask about a case or to order a copy.

A trip to the Clerk works best when you need a certified copy of a sentencing order or a full case file. Staff can pull the case by name or by case number. Plain copies cost less than certified ones. The Clerk also keeps old criminal cases on microfilm and in bound books. Cases from the General District Court live with that court's clerk, not Circuit. Both offices share the same Fredericksburg court complex.

See more from Fredericksburg Circuit Court Clerk below.

Fredericksburg Circuit Court Clerk for Fredericksburg recent arrests

The Clerk's page above lists records desk hours and the fees for plain and certified copies of Fredericksburg recent arrests files.

Virginia Court Online Search

The state runs a free online portal called Online Case Information System, or OCIS. It covers Circuit Courts and District Courts in every Virginia city and county, including Fredericksburg. You search by name, case number, or hearing date. The system shows the charge, the judge, the next court date, and the case status. Pull it up at eapps.courts.state.va.us/ocis.

OCIS does not show full document images. To get the actual papers, you still go to the Clerk in Fredericksburg. But the portal is the fastest way to confirm that a case is real and to find the case number. Pick "Fredericksburg Circuit Court" or the matching General District Court from the drop-down. The data updates each business day.

Note: Recent bookings for Fredericksburg often appear on daily booking logs the city posts to the police page.

Fredericksburg Criminal History Checks

The Virginia State Police runs the state-level criminal history check. Anyone can buy a name-based search for a small fee. Police staff check the record against the Central Criminal Records Exchange. The search returns charges, arrests, and case results from across the state, not just Fredericksburg. The form sits at vsp.virginia.gov/CJIS_Criminal_History.shtm. Mail it in with the fee. You get the result by mail.

The legal basis for these checks is in Va. Code § 19.2-389. The law lists who can see what. Sealed records, expunged records, and juvenile cases stay out of the report. A custodial arrest in Fredericksburg still falls under the rules in Va. Code § 19.2-81 and Va. Code § 19.2-82, which set the steps for arrest and the path to the magistrate.

The Virginia State Police also keeps the state Sex Offender Registry. You can search by name or by ZIP. Visit sex-offender.vsp.virginia.gov.

Virginia State Police criminal history page tied to Fredericksburg recent arrests background checks.

Virginia State Police criminal history page for Fredericksburg recent arrests

The state criminal history page above lists the form, the fee, and the mailing steps tied to any Fredericksburg recent arrests background check.

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Public Records Law in Fredericksburg

Most Fredericksburg recent arrests data falls under the Virginia Freedom of Information Act. The full law is in Va. Code § 2.2-3700 and following. The Act gives any citizen of the Commonwealth the right to ask for public records held by a state or local agency. Each office has a FOIA officer who logs requests and tracks the clock. The Virginia FOIA Council sits at foiacouncil.dls.virginia.gov.

An agency has five working days to reply. The reply may be the records, a denial with the legal reason, or a notice that more time is needed. Costs for staff time and copies are allowed. Active case files, juvenile records, and certain personnel data are exempt. Most arrest blotters and incident summaries do not fall under those rules.

Tips for a clean FOIA request:

  • Use full names and known dates
  • Ask for a case number if you have it
  • Pick a tight date range
  • State you are a Virginia citizen
  • Give a clear way to send the reply

Related Virginia Resources

State and federal partners hold more data tied to Fredericksburg recent arrests. The Virginia Department of Corrections at vadoc.virginia.gov tracks people in state prison after sentencing. The Library of Virginia at lva.virginia.gov holds old court records. The Code of Virginia is online at law.lis.virginia.gov/vacode. For appeals and state court info, see vacourts.gov. For statewide crime maps, see vsp.virginia.gov.

Note: The Rappahannock Regional Jail houses inmates from the City of Fredericksburg as well as Stafford, Spotsylvania, and King George.