Search Lebanon Inmate Population
Lebanon inmate population searches route through Wilson County. Lebanon Police handle the city side, but the county jail in Lebanon is where current custody records live. The county roster and inmate search tools show booking dates, charges, bond information, and mugshots, while the city side helps explain where the arrest started. When direct official roster pages are unstable, the county government page and Tennessee state tools are the safest path. That keeps the search local without relying on a weak or broken page.
Lebanon Quick Facts
Lebanon Inmate Population Search
The Lebanon Police Department is the city side of the search. The city arrest trail points to the county jail, and the research says arrests made by Lebanon Police are transferred to Wilson County Jail. That means a local booking can move from a city stop to a county custody record quickly. If you are trying to match a name to a current location, the county jail search is the best first step once you know the arrest happened in Lebanon.
Wilson County jail information in the research shows a medium-to-maximum security facility with room for 462 inmates. The county uses an iSOM inmate search platform and the roster can show booking dates, charges, bond information, mugshots, and release status. The research also says the jail roster can show inmates held within 24 or 72 hours. That makes the Lebanon search useful for both fresh bookings and older custody checks.
The county government image below is the most stable manifest-backed source for Lebanon inmate population work.
Read the county source at Wilson County Government before you rely on a roster result.
That county image is useful because it points to the government office tied to the jail and roster path.
Lebanon Police records also matter. The city police page is the best place to start when the arrest began in town and you need the city side of the file. The research says criminal history records are maintained by TBI, so city arrest details and state history are not the same thing. Keep those records separate unless the office itself tells you otherwise.
Wilson County Inmate Population Records
Wilson County jail information is the heart of the Lebanon search. The research says the jail has three buildings and an administrative block, opened in 1992, and holds 462 inmates. It also says the roster and inmate search can show name, release status, booking dates, charges, bond, and mugshots. That is enough to get a real custody answer, not just a one-line hint. If the person is still in local custody, the county page is the right place to look.
Because the official sheriff links were unstable in the research, the county government page is the safest public fallback. It keeps the search anchored to the Wilson County office without sending you to a broken page. If the county roster still does not resolve the question, the Tennessee FOIL tool is the right backup for felony offenders in TDOC custody. The state layer can confirm whether a person moved out of county jail and into prison or supervision.
The search gets easier when you split it into two steps. First, use the county jail path. Then, if the person is no longer there, use the state tool. That is the cleanest way to avoid chasing an old booking that has already moved on.
Lebanon Inmate Population and Records
Lebanon Police is the city agency that starts the arrest trail. The county jail is the custody office that ends the intake trail. In practice, the city record explains what happened in Lebanon, and the county record explains where the person sits now. That split matters because city and county records are not interchangeable. The city page may tell you about the arrest. The county page may tell you the bond or release status.
The city search also helps if you need to cross-check charges against the county roster. The research says Wilson County records can include personal information, arresting agency, charges, booking info, bail, and mugshots. That gives you enough detail to match a Lebanon police arrest to a jail line. If the search result is incomplete, the county roster and the city police page together usually fill the gap.
When you need a broader Tennessee context, the Public Records Act at T.C.A. ยง 10-7-503 is still the legal foundation for public access. It helps explain why some custody records are public and why some details remain limited. A Lebanon search usually starts local, but the state rule still sets the boundary.
TDOC Tools for Lebanon Inmate Population
Once a Wilson County case moves into state custody, use TDOC's FOIL. It shows status, location, photo, and active sentence information for Tennessee felony offenders in TDOC custody or former custody. That is the right next step when the county roster no longer shows the person or the jail says the offender has transferred out.
The TDOC portal at tn.gov/correction.html and the victim services page at tn.gov/correction/victim-services.html are useful when a Lebanon search becomes a notice or release question. TDOC victim services can help with release updates and notification paths. That can matter more than the jail roster once the case reaches state custody.
If supervision becomes part of the question, the TDOC field office directory at tn.gov/correction/community-supervision/field-office-directory.html helps locate the right office. Lebanon searches often end there after the county jail phase is over.
Lebanon Inmate Population and Nearby Cities
Lebanon sits near several other county systems, so a search can move out of Wilson County if the booking happened elsewhere. If that happens, use the city page that matches the arrest location. That keeps the search tied to the right jail and the right records office.
Use another city page below if the Lebanon record does not fit the person you are checking.