Search Trinity County Recent Arrests

Trinity County recent arrests are handled entirely by the Trinity County Sheriff's Office in Weaverville. This is one of the least populated counties in all of California. The sheriff's office runs the county jail and manages all booking records for the area. Because the county is so remote and sparsely settled, arrest volume stays low compared to other parts of the state. Still, booking information is public under California law. You can contact the sheriff's office to ask about recent arrests or check their website for any posted information. Finding arrest records in Trinity County often means calling the jail or visiting the office in person.

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Trinity County Quick Facts

Weaverville County Seat
~16,000 Population
Free Records Request
Phone/Online Search Methods

Trinity County Arrest Records Access

The Trinity County Sheriff's Office is the sole law enforcement agency for most of the county. There are no city police departments here. The sheriff handles patrol, investigations, and the jail. When someone is arrested, they are booked into the Trinity County Jail in Weaverville. The booking creates a record that includes the person's name, charges, bail amount, and arrest date. That information is public under state law.

Trinity County does not have a large online inmate search database like bigger counties do. The best way to find out about recent arrests is to call the sheriff's office or visit the website for posted updates. Some booking information may be shared on the office's web pages. Because the county is small, the staff can usually answer questions about who is in custody with a quick phone call. The jail is not large, so the number of people booked at any given time is limited.

Note: Trinity County arrest volume is among the lowest in California due to the small population.

Trinity County Sheriff's Office

The Trinity County Sheriff's Office handles all arrests in the area. You can find general information on the sheriff's website.

Trinity County Sheriff's Office website for arrest records

This page provides contact details and general information about the sheriff's operations, including the jail and booking process in Trinity County.

The sheriff's office sits in Weaverville, which is also the county seat. Weaverville is a small mountain town along Highway 299. The jail is attached to the sheriff's facility. When deputies or CHP officers make an arrest in Trinity County, the person is brought to this jail for booking. Because the county covers a huge land area with rough terrain, transport times can be long. An arrest on a remote road may take hours before the person reaches the jail. Once there, standard booking steps happen. Staff take fingerprints, log the charges, and set bail. The record goes into the system and becomes available for public inquiry.

Arrest Disclosure Rules in Trinity County

California requires all law enforcement agencies to release certain arrest information. Government Code 7923.610 lists what must be made public. This includes the arrested person's full name, physical description, the date and time of arrest, booking date and time, where the arrest took place, the circumstances, bail, and all charges. Trinity County must follow this law just like every other county.

Even though Trinity County is small and remote, the legal requirements are the same. If you ask the sheriff's office for recent arrest data, they are required to give it to you. The only carve-out is when disclosure could endanger someone or compromise an investigation. In practice, most booking details for recent arrests in Trinity County are available on request.

The California Public Records Act also applies. You can submit a formal records request to the Trinity County Sheriff. The office must respond within 10 days. Fees for copies of records are minimal. Digital copies may be free in some cases.

Trinity County Arrest Record Sealing

People arrested in Trinity County who were not convicted can ask to have the record sealed. Penal Code 851.87 is the statute that covers this. You file a petition with Trinity County Superior Court. If the judge grants it, the arrest is sealed. After that, you can tell employers and others that you were not arrested for that charge. It will not show on most background checks.

There is also an automatic relief option. The California DOJ reviews arrest records monthly under AB 1076. Misdemeanor arrests from 2021 onward that were dismissed or had no charges filed within one year get automatic relief. You do not need to file anything for this. The DOJ handles it on its own. This applies to Trinity County arrests just like any other jurisdiction in California.

Statewide Tools for Trinity County

If you want to check your own criminal record rather than just recent arrests, the California DOJ Record Review process is the way to go. It costs $25 and you need to submit fingerprints through Live Scan. The nearest Live Scan sites to Trinity County may be in Redding or Red Bluff in neighboring Shasta and Tehama counties. The DOJ will send you a copy of your full state criminal history.

The CDCR inmate search tool covers people in state prison. If someone was arrested in Trinity County and later sent to a state correctional facility, this is where you look them up. The CDCR database shows name, age, facility, and parole hearing information. It does not cover county jails. For county-level data, you still need the Trinity County Sheriff's records.

Note: The VINE notification system (877-411-5588) lets you register for alerts when an inmate's custody status changes.

Booking Photo Laws for Trinity County

Booking photos are taken during the arrest process. California has specific rules about how these photos can be used. Under SB 1027, no one can charge you money to remove your booking photo from a website. If a site posts your Trinity County mugshot and demands payment, that is a violation of state law. You can take legal action and recover at least $1,000 per violation.

There are also limits on law enforcement sharing booking photos on social media. AB 1475 restricts posting photos of people arrested for nonviolent offenses unless the person is a fugitive or there is a public safety concern. The Trinity County Sheriff must follow these rules when deciding whether to share arrest photos on any social media platforms.

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Trinity County Arrests by City

Trinity County has no cities with a population over 100,000. In fact, the entire county has about 16,000 residents. All law enforcement is handled by the Trinity County Sheriff's Office. There are no city police departments. Every arrest in the county goes through the sheriff and is booked at the Trinity County Jail in Weaverville.

Nearby Counties

Counties near Trinity County have their own arrest record systems. Some, like Shasta County, have much larger populations and more active online search tools.