Greenville Arrest Records

Greenville is the seat of Pitt County in eastern North Carolina. The city has about 93,000 residents and is home to East Carolina University. Arrest records from Greenville are maintained by the police department and the Pitt County court system. These files are open to the public under state records law and can be searched through several channels. Local police and the county sheriff's office both handle arrest records for Greenville residents. You can search these records online or visit the courthouse in person to request copies of arrest records and related criminal case documents.

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Greenville Police Department Records

The Greenville Police Department is at 700 W 5th St, Greenville, NC 27834. The phone number is (252) 329-4300. Officers respond to calls across the city and create arrest reports for every booking. Those reports enter the department's public record system.

To request arrest records from Greenville police, provide the full name and date of birth of the person you are looking for. Walk-in visits work well for fast results. You can also call or write to the department. Fees may apply for printed copies. Staff will check their files and let you know what they have. Recent arrests in Greenville are the simplest to find.

The Greenville Police Department records office handles requests for arrest records and police reports from the city.

Greenville Police Department records office for arrest record requests

This office processes requests during regular weekday hours.

The university brings a large student population to Greenville. This affects the type and volume of arrests in the city. The police department treats all arrest records the same regardless of who is involved. Every booking creates a file that stays on record unless a court orders it removed.

Pitt County Court Records for Greenville

The Pitt County Clerk of Superior Court is at 100 W 3rd St, Greenville, NC 27835. Call (252) 695-7100 for questions. The clerk manages all criminal case files from Greenville. When an arrest leads to charges, the case goes through this courthouse.

Court files show everything that happens after the arrest. Charges, bond details, hearing dates, motions, plea agreements, verdicts, and sentences are all part of the record. These are public documents under Chapter 132 of the General Statutes. Give the clerk a name or case number and they will pull the file. Copies are available for a small fee.

The Pitt County Sheriff detention center holds people arrested in Greenville and the surrounding area. The sheriff's website shows current inmate data. This is a free tool that lists names, charges, and bond amounts for people currently in custody.

Searching Greenville Arrest Records Online

Online searches give you fast results without a trip to the courthouse. Several tools cover different parts of the record system. Using multiple tools gives the fullest picture.

The Pitt County court records page provides a starting point for case data. The Pitt County Sheriff site shows current inmates. For statewide searches, the NC SBI holds the central criminal record database. The NC DPS offender search covers people who served time in state prison.

  • Pitt County Sheriff inmate search
  • Pitt County Clerk for court case files
  • NC SBI for statewide criminal history
  • NC DPS offender search for prison data

The Pitt County arrest records system shown here stores booking data from the Greenville Police Department and the county sheriff.

Pitt County arrest records system for Greenville area bookings

This county-level tool captures arrest records from all law enforcement agencies in Pitt County.

Note: The NC Courts website explains how to request a formal criminal background check, which may include Greenville arrest records.

Greenville Arrest Records and Public Law

N.C.G.S. 132-1.4 sets the rules for law enforcement record access. Basic arrest data from Greenville is public. Names, charges, and booking facts must be shared on request. The Greenville Police Department and the Pitt County Sheriff both follow this law.

Juvenile records are sealed. Expunged records are deleted from public view. Active investigations may be held back while the case is open. These are the main limits. If an agency denies your request, they must name the statute. You have the right to challenge a denial in court if you think it was wrong.

Greenville Criminal Case Process

After an arrest in Greenville, the person goes before a magistrate for an initial appearance. Bond is set based on the charges and other factors. The case then moves through the Pitt County court system. Misdemeanors are heard in district court. Felonies go to superior court. Both types generate records that the public can access.

The arrest record links to the court file through a case number. You can follow the entire case from booking to verdict using this number. The Pitt County Clerk can help you trace any case that began with an arrest in Greenville. All records are stored at the courthouse at 100 W 3rd St.

Note: Arrest records from Greenville may show initial charges that differ from the final charges after review by the district attorney's office in Pitt County.

Pitt County Arrest Records

Greenville is the largest city in Pitt County. The county also includes Winterville, Ayden, and other towns. All arrest records from these areas feed into the same court system. For a broader view of county data, visit the Pitt County page.

View Pitt County Arrest Records

How Greenville Arrest Records Are Created

When police in Greenville make an arrest, the process creates a series of public records. The arresting officer files a report with the details of the incident. This report includes the suspect's name, date of birth, physical description, and the charges. A booking record is then created at the county detention facility that serves Greenville. The booking record adds a mugshot, fingerprints, and bond information to the file. All of this data becomes part of the arrest record under North Carolina law.

After the initial arrest in Greenville, the case moves through the county court system. The clerk of court creates a case file that tracks every action from the first appearance to the final outcome. Motions, plea agreements, trial dates, and sentencing records are all part of this file. Under N.C.G.S. Chapter 132, most of these Greenville arrest records are open to the public. Anyone can request to view them at the clerk's office or search for basic case information through the NC Courts portal. Some records may be sealed by court order, but this is not common for standard arrest cases in Greenville.

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