Cleburne County Inmate Population

The Cleburne County inmate population is held at the Cleburne County Detention Center in Heber Springs. The jail uses the ISOMS portal for public access. The portal shows current inmates, last 72 hours bookings, and core data for each record. This page covers the jail phone numbers, the portal link, FOIA steps, and the state-level ADC search. Use the links here to find a person in custody or track a recent booking. All listed tools are free to use.

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Cleburne County Inmate Population Overview

Heber SpringsCounty Seat
ISOMSPortal System
72 HrsIntake Window
24/7Jail Intake

The Cleburne County Detention Center is at 914 South 9th Street in Heber Springs. The Sheriff's Office phone is (501) 362-8143. The detention center direct line is (501) 362-2596. The jail takes bookings 24 hours a day. Office hours run Monday through Friday from 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM.

The jail uses the Integrated Software for Offender Management (ISOMS) system for its public inmate portal. The Cleburne County inmate population data shown on the portal includes current inmates, the last 72 hours of bookings, age, race and sex, intake date, city, arresting department, charges, and bond information.

Cleburne County ISOMS Inmate Portal

The ISOMS portal is at the Cleburne County ISOMS jail portal. The page loads a tabular list of current inmates. Each record shows the name, age, classification, race and sex, intake date, city, arresting department or officer, release date if any, and a detailed charge and bond table.

Cleburne County ISOMS portal for inmate population search

The ISOMS portal is clean and fast. Use the page controls to browse through the full list of inmates. Click a name for the full record and charge breakdown.

Note: The Cleburne County inmate population data on the ISOMS portal can update several times per day, but new bookings may not appear right after intake.

FOIA Requests for Cleburne County Inmate Records

Send written FOIA requests to Cleburne County Sheriff's Office, 914 South 9th Street, Heber Springs, AR 72543. Arkansas FOIA rules under Ark. Code Ann. § 25-19-101 require a response within three business days. Standard FOIA exemptions apply.

Juvenile records are sealed under Ark. Code § 9-27-309. Active investigation files are not open. Medical records stay private. Include your contact info and a clear description of the records you want.

The Arkansas Attorney General office publishes a full FOIA Handbook. Call (501) 682-2007 for FOIA help.

Court Records Tied to Cleburne County Inmates

Every person in the Cleburne County inmate population came through a court. Criminal case files, dockets, and judgments are kept by the Circuit Clerk at the county courthouse in Heber Springs. Staff can pull paper files during office hours.

Online court records run through Arkansas CourtConnect. Search by name, case number, or filing date. Basic searches are free. Certified copies of court records cost $5 to $10 per document plus a per-page fee. The Arkansas Judiciary main site has court contact info and user guides for CourtConnect.

Visitation, Bond, and Commissary

Contact the jail directly for current visitation schedules, bond procedures, and commissary deposit rules. Call (501) 362-2596 for the detention center. Policies can change based on facility needs.

Cash bonds are posted at the facility. Surety bonds go through licensed bail bondsmen. Commissary funds can be added through procedures the jail sets. The ISOMS portal does not handle commissary deposits.

Federal Inmate Locator

Federal inmates do not appear in the Cleburne County inmate population or the ADC state search. Use the Federal Bureau of Prisons Inmate Locator instead. Search by name or BOP register number.

The Federal Bureau of Prisons main site has visiting rules and facility contact info. For victim notification needs, use VINELink. Cleburne County may or may not feed VINE. Call the jail to confirm.

Parole Process for Cleburne County Inmates

State prison inmates from Cleburne County cases come up for parole review under rules set by the Arkansas Parole Board. Under Ark. Code Ann. § 16-93-202, the board posts info about each parole-eligible inmate at least six months before the hearing. The post lists the inmate's name, ADC number, prior revocations, and a recent photo.

The board meets several times each month. Hearings are not open to the public for most cases. Victims and family of victims can attend or send written statements. The board votes on whether to grant parole, deny it, or set the case for review at a later date. Parole grants usually come with conditions like supervision, drug testing, and restrictions on travel.

Cleburne County Mugshot and Photo Release

Mugshots taken during Cleburne County inmate population intake are public records under Arkansas FOIA. Most county sheriff offices release booking photos on request. Some post them directly to the online roster. A few smaller offices ask for supervisor approval before releasing a photo, especially if the case is tied to an active investigation.

Under Ark. Code Ann. § 25-19-105, the Sheriff has three business days to respond to a mugshot request. The fee is limited to actual duplication cost. Mugshots may be delivered as a digital file or a printed copy. Older mugshots, including ones from cases that ended years ago, can usually still be pulled from archived records.

Inmate Mail and Communication

People in the Cleburne County inmate population can get mail from family and friends. Letters must be on plain paper with the inmate's full name and booking number on the envelope. Most facilities reject mail with stickers, glitter, perfume, lipstick, or stamps that are not standard postage. Postcards are often the safest format because they pass through screening fast.

Packages are usually not allowed unless approved in advance by jail staff. Books and magazines often need to come direct from the publisher. Money may be sent through approved deposit methods, not in the mail. Legal mail from an attorney follows a separate process and is opened only in the inmate's presence.

Cleburne County Commissary Deposit Methods

Inmates in the Cleburne County inmate population use the commissary to buy snacks, hygiene items, writing supplies, and phone time. Funds are added to each inmate's account in a few ways.

Most facilities have a lobby kiosk that takes cash or card deposits 24 hours a day. Money orders sent through the mail must include the inmate's name and booking number. Many jails also accept online deposits through a contracted vendor like Tiger Commissary or Access Corrections. The vendor charges a small processing fee per deposit.

Parole Process for Cleburne County Inmates

State prison inmates from Cleburne County cases come up for parole review under rules set by the Arkansas Parole Board. Under Ark. Code Ann. § 16-93-202, the board posts info about each parole-eligible inmate at least six months before the hearing. The post lists the inmate's name, ADC number, prior revocations, and a recent photo.

The board meets several times each month. Hearings are not open to the public for most cases. Victims and family of victims can attend or send written statements. The board votes on whether to grant parole, deny it, or set the case for review at a later date. Parole grants usually come with conditions like supervision, drug testing, and restrictions on travel.

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Nearby Arkansas Counties

Cleburne County sits in north central Arkansas. These nearby counties run their own jails and records tools.