Hopewell Booking Releases

Hopewell booking releases come out of the Hopewell Police Department and the Riverside Regional Jail. If you need to find a recent jail booking, look up an inmate, or check the release status of a person held in Hopewell, this page shows you where to start. Hopewell is an independent city sitting at the mouth of the Appomattox River near Petersburg. The city runs its own police force but sends inmates to a regional jail in Prince George County. Most lookups can be done by phone or through the Virginia VINE service.

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Hopewell Overview

~22.5K Population
Independent City Status
Riverside Regional Jail
804-541-2226 Sheriff Phone

Hopewell Jail Bookings

The Hopewell Sheriff's Office sits at 300 N. Main Street and the main phone is (804) 541-2226. Staff there can confirm if a person is in custody and tell you which facility holds them. Most adult inmates from Hopewell go to the Riverside Regional Jail. That facility is shared with Colonial Heights, Petersburg, Prince George County, and several other localities. The sheriff's office handles court security, civil process, and intake. The Riverside Regional Jail keeps the day-to-day custody roster and the booking release log.

To find a Hopewell booking or release, you can call the jail or the sheriff first. Family often start with a phone call to confirm a name. If the person was booked the day before, jail staff usually have the file ready. The city government home page at www.hopewellva.gov links out to public safety contacts and FOIA help. The Hopewell Sheriff's Office page has visit rules and inmate phone info.

Note: Booking and release info changes throughout the day, so call back if a name is not on the roster the first time.

Hopewell Police Arrest Logs

The Hopewell Police Department makes most of the arrests that lead to a city jail booking. The records unit keeps arrest reports, incident reports, and the daily blotter. Virginia Code § 2.2-3706 makes basic arrest data public. That means name, date of arrest, and the charge are on the record by law. Hopewell police booking releases are part of that public set, even when the rest of the case file stays closed.

The department shares fingerprints and arrest data with the Virginia State Police. State and federal partners pull from the same pool. For a name-based check on a person, the Virginia State Police runs the Central Criminal Records Exchange. That system covers all of Virginia, including Hopewell. The fee is $15 per name. Use form SP-167 to request a copy. Processing takes about fifteen days.

Hopewell police arrest logs are usually short for any single day. Reporters and the public can ask for the log through the records desk. Replies come back within five working days, the limit set by the Virginia FOIA Council. The log gives you the bare facts of each arrest. To get a full case file, you go to the court clerk after the case is set on the docket.

Hopewell Court Records

Most criminal cases that begin with a Hopewell booking move to the Hopewell General District Court or the Hopewell Circuit Court. The district court handles misdemeanors, traffic, and first appearances. The circuit court handles felonies. Hopewell sits in the 6th Judicial Circuit. Case files show the charge, hearing dates, plea, and final order. You can search most district and circuit cases by name on the statewide system.

The Virginia Judicial System case info site lets you look up most district and circuit cases by name. Visit Virginia Judicial System case info site to start. The Hopewell General District Court page is at vacourts.gov. Use the clerk for older files that are not on the online system. Walk-in hours match normal court hours, usually 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

If you tie a case file to a Hopewell booking release, you get a fuller picture. The case file shows what happened after the arrest. The booking release shows who was held and when they got out. Together, those two records tell the story of the case from start to finish.

Note: Older Hopewell circuit case files from before 1990 may sit at the Library of Virginia rather than the local clerk.

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State Tools for Hopewell

Several state tools help with Hopewell booking releases. The Virginia VINE system sends free alerts when a person is released from a local jail. You can sign up by phone or online. VINE covers most jails in the state, including the Riverside Regional Jail that holds Hopewell inmates. For people held past sentencing, the Virginia Department of Corrections offender locator shows the current facility and a release date. That tool is free and updated daily.

The Virginia FOIA Council offers free help if a Hopewell booking release request gets denied or delayed. Under Virginia Code Title 2.2, Chapter 37, public records are presumed open. Exemptions must be narrow. The Virginia State Police also publish the annual Crime in Virginia report, which lists arrest counts and offense data for Hopewell and other cities. It is a good way to see how Hopewell booking release volume has changed year over year.

Hopewell Booking Releases at the State Level

Hopewell does not post a photo gallery of its own jail roster, so statewide tools fill the gap. Visit Central Criminal Records Exchange for one central place to start a search that touches Hopewell booking releases along with the rest of Virginia.

Hopewell Virginia Booking Releases - Central Criminal Records Exchange

The page shown is the statewide records exchange. It links to forms, contact info, and the rules that back up local Hopewell booking releases data.

FOIA for Hopewell Booking Releases

A written FOIA request is the best way to get a full set of Hopewell booking releases for a date range. Send the request to the Hopewell Police records unit or the sheriff's office records unit. Email is fine. Name the person, give the date range, and state that you want booking and release info. The agency has five working days to reply. They can ask for seven more if needed.

Most Hopewell FOIA requests are simple. A one-name lookup will not cost much. A full month of arrest logs may run a few dollars. The records officer can email a fee estimate before doing any work. If you do not agree, you can narrow the request and try again. The Hopewell city contact for general FOIA mail is the city clerk at (804) 541-2249. Use that contact for records that fall outside the police side.

Note: Fees may apply for large record sets, and the agency must give you a cost estimate before doing the work.

Hopewell Inmate Lookup Tips

To find a person held on Hopewell charges, start with the Riverside Regional Jail. The jail logs every intake. Have the full legal name and date of birth ready when you call. If you only have a nickname, the search may turn up nothing. Bond information is set by a magistrate soon after booking. That bond shows on the inmate file. Once a person posts bond, the file flips to released and the booking release date is logged in the system.

Hopewell bookings vary in volume by the day. Most weeks see a steady stream of arrests for traffic, drug, and minor assault charges. That makes the local booking release file easy to scan if you know the date. If you are tracking a single name, the staff can usually answer in one call. For older records, send a written FOIA request and cite Virginia Code § 2.2-3706. Ask for the booking date, charges, bond, and release date.

Nearby Cities

These cities are near Hopewell and run their own jail and booking release systems.

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