Pasco County Arrest Records 2026: Search Bookings, Mugshots

Pasco County, Florida · Booking, report, warrant and court-record guide

Find and Verify a Pasco County Arrest Without Missing the Court Outcome

A single Pasco County arrest can produce a jail booking, booking photograph, police report, probable-cause document, warrant entry and criminal court case. These records are maintained by different offices and do not always update at the same time.

This guide brings the county’s important search rules, report-request requirements, copy fees, jail-mail instructions, video-visit costs, correction options and sealing process into one page. Use an outside portal only when the final live search or submission must be completed there.

Arrest does not mean conviction. A booking charge is an allegation recorded during the arrest or intake process. Charges can be amended, declined, dismissed or resolved without a conviction. Never identify a person from a matching name or mugshot alone.
Current custody

Use the official In Custody search.

Previous booking

Use the Past Arrests search.

Police narrative

Request it from the arresting agency.

Case outcome

Verify it through the Clerk’s court docket.

Official review

Facts checked July 13, 2026.

Start here

Which Pasco County record solves your problem?

PASCO CORRECTIONS Is the person in jail now?

Use In Custody to check whether the person is presently listed in Pasco County Corrections custody. Save the exact name, inmate ID, booking number, arrest date and each listed charge.

Use for: live custody, booking identity, current charges, bond entries and release tracking.
ARRESTING AGENCY What allegedly happened?

Request the incident report, arrest report, probable-cause affidavit or releasable supplements from the agency whose officer or deputy made the arrest.

Use for: incident narrative, officer observations, report numbers and releasable investigative documents.
CLERK OF COURT What happened to the charge?

Search the criminal court docket for filed charges, hearings, amended documents, orders, pleas, judgments, sentencing and final disposition.

Use for: prosecution status, court dates, dismissal, nolle prosequi, judgment and certified proof.
Most reliable sequence: Find the booking, record the official identifiers, verify the arresting agency, search the criminal court docket and request only the specific report or certified document still needed.

Go directly to the answer you need

The important rules are explained inside this page rather than hidden behind a collection of resource links.

Official lookup workflow

How to search current and past Pasco County bookings

Choose the correct search category Select In Custody when you believe the person is held now. Select Past Arrests when the person was released or the arrest occurred earlier.
Start with only the last name A broad surname search avoids excluding a valid result because of a middle-name difference, suffix, maiden name, compound surname or spelling variation.
Add the first name gradually Add the legal first name only when the surname produces too many results. Test a shortened first name or alternate spelling when necessary.
Open every plausible result Do not assume the first matching name is the correct person. Review the birth date or age, arrest date, arresting agency, inmate ID and booking identifiers.
Separate each custody event The same person may have multiple prior bookings. Confirm that the arrest date and agency match the event you are researching.
Read every charge line A booking can contain several charges, warrants or holds. Record each charge description, case reference, bond entry and status separately.
Save the original identifiers Capture the booking number, inmate ID, arrest number, report number, case number and arresting agency whenever displayed.
Continue to the criminal court record The booking reflects intake information. The court docket is needed to determine what the prosecutor filed and how the matter was ultimately resolved.
Result decoder

What the fields in a Pasco County arrest result mean

Booking fields, limitations and next actions
Field What it identifies What it does not prove Best next action
Inmate ID The person’s identifier within the Pasco Corrections system. It does not explain the final court result. Use it for mail, provider accounts and Corrections questions.
Booking number A particular intake or custody episode. It does not mean every listed charge became a filed court charge. Save it when contacting Corrections or requesting booking information.
Arrest date The date associated with the law-enforcement arrest. It may differ from the date of booking or court filing. Use it to distinguish multiple bookings with similar names.
Booking date When the person entered the jail-booking process. It is not necessarily the exact time of the alleged offense. Compare it with the known arrest timeline.
Arresting agency The sheriff, police department or other agency responsible for the arrest. It does not mean that agency controls the court file. Send the police-report request to this agency.
Report or arrest number The agency’s incident or arrest reference. It may not be the same as the court case number. Include it in a narrowly written public-records request.
Charge description The alleged offense entered during arrest or booking. It does not prove guilt and may not match the charge later filed. Check the Clerk docket for the information, complaint or amended charge.
Bond amount A bond entry presently associated with a charge or case. Paying one amount may not clear another charge, warrant or hold. Confirm every charge and hold before making payment arrangements.
Release date When the listed custody episode ended. Release does not mean dismissal, acquittal or innocence. Search the related criminal court case.
Booking photograph An image taken during custody processing. A mugshot does not prove criminal responsibility. Use it only with stronger identifiers such as birth date and record numbers.
Fast-changing fields: Custody, housing, bond and release information can change after first appearance, classification, court action, transfer or completion of release processing.
Identity safeguard

Use this verification test before relying on a booking

Full first and last name are consistent
Middle name, suffix or alias is consistent
Date of birth or age is consistent
Arrest date matches the known event
Arresting agency matches the location
Booking, report or case number matches another official record
Minimum standard: Confirm at least two independent identifiers before sending money, contacting an employer, publishing an accusation or treating the result as belonging to a particular person.
Same name but different birth date Treat the results as different people unless the maintaining agency confirms a clerical error.
Similar photograph but different identifier The official identifier is more reliable than visual resemblance.
Same birth date but different middle name Check aliases, former names, fingerprints where legally available and the court case number.
Old or unfamiliar address An address may be outdated, incomplete or legally protected. Do not use it as the only identity match.
Troubleshooting

No Pasco County record found? Check these causes in order

The arrest happened recently The person may still be completing identification, intake, medical screening, property inventory or data entry.
You searched only In Custody The person may have been released. Repeat the search under Past Arrests.
The name is entered differently Search the surname alone and try maiden names, hyphen variations, aliases, suffixes and alternate spellings.
A municipal department made the arrest The detailed report may be held by a city police department even when the person was booked into the county jail.
No court case appears yet The prosecutor may still be reviewing the arrest, filing may not yet be visible or the case may use a different identifier.
The person was transferred Custody may have moved to another county, Florida Department of Corrections, federal custody or another jurisdiction.
The arrest occurred outside Pasco County Search the jurisdiction where the arrest occurred rather than the person’s home address.
The record is confidential or restricted Juvenile, sealed, expunged, medical, victim-related and legally confidential information may not appear publicly.
Call script for a missing booking “I am trying to confirm the custody or booking status of [full legal name], date of birth [date]. The arrest may have occurred on [date] through [agency]. I have [booking, arrest, report or case number]. Can you tell me whether the person is currently held, released, transferred or listed under another identifier?”
Full record lifecycle

What happens from arrest to final court disposition?

Law-enforcement incident A deputy or officer creates the agency record. It may include an incident report, arrest affidavit, probable-cause narrative, property record, photographs, video references and supplements.
Booking and identification Corrections creates a custody record, verifies identity, records property, assigns an inmate identifier and enters the charges or holds received during intake.
Medical screening and classification Health, safety, custody and operational factors can affect housing and services. A displayed housing assignment may change.
First appearance and release review A court may address probable cause, counsel, bond, release conditions and scheduling. A bond entry can change after judicial review.
Prosecutor filing decision The State Attorney may file the original allegation, file a different charge, reduce a charge or decline prosecution.
Criminal court docket The Clerk records filed documents, hearings, motions, orders, pleas, verdicts, judgments and sentencing information available to the public.
Release or transfer A person may be released, remain because of another hold or transfer to another agency. Release from jail does not resolve the court case.
Final disposition and possible record relief The case may end through dismissal, nolle prosequi, plea, trial, adjudication or another disposition. An eligible person may later pursue sealing or expungement.
Public-record request

How to request a Pasco Sheriff arrest or incident report

Pasco Sheriff Public Records Department
20105 Central Boulevard
Land O’ Lakes, FL 34637
Direct contact

Phone: 813-235-6118

Fax: 813-235-6119

Email: PublicRecords@pascosheriff.org

Documents you may need to name specifically

Incident report

The primary agency report describing the reported incident and initial law-enforcement response.

Arrest or probable-cause report

The document describing the asserted legal basis for arrest, when maintained and publicly releasable.

Supplemental reports

Later reports created by investigators or responding personnel. Active or exempt material may be withheld or redacted.

Property or evidence receipt

A record of property collected, booked, released or retained, subject to disclosure restrictions.

Body-camera or recording reference

Describe the event, involved personnel and date precisely. Large media requests may require additional processing and cost.

Local arrest history

A Sheriff-generated local history limited to arrests conducted by the Pasco Sheriff’s Office.

Information requested on the Sheriff’s local arrest-history form

Date the request is made
Full name of the person searched
Alias, maiden name or other known name
Date of birth
Social Security number when voluntarily provided and legally appropriate
Requester’s telephone number
Mail, fax or email return method
Complete return address when mail is requested
Local-history limitation: The Sheriff’s form states that the result concerns arrests conducted by the Pasco Sheriff’s Office. It is not a complete Pasco, Florida or nationwide criminal-history report.

Write a request that can be processed without guesswork

Copy-ready request
Under Florida public-records law, I request an electronic copy of the releasable incident report, arrest report, probable-cause affidavit and releasable supplemental reports relating to [full legal name], date of birth [date if known], for the incident or arrest occurring on or about [date] at [location]. The believed arresting agency is [agency]. Known identifiers are: arrest number [number], report number [number], booking number [number] and court case number [number]. Please provide a written cost estimate before processing if the total will exceed $[amount].

Why a report may be delayed, redacted or partially withheld

  • The investigation remains active and information is temporarily exempt.
  • The record contains victim, witness, juvenile or confidential personal information.
  • Medical, mental-health or protected identifying information must be removed.
  • Audio, video or photographs require review and redaction.
  • The request is broad and requires extensive use of staff or technology resources.
  • The requested document belongs to another agency or the Clerk rather than the Sheriff.
Control cost and delay: Ask for a date range, one incident, one person and identified document types. Request electronic delivery and require approval before the office exceeds a stated cost limit.
Correct record holder

Which office controls each Pasco County record?

Record type and responsible office
Record needed Likely custodian Information to provide Common mistake
Current custody listing Pasco County Corrections Name, birth date, inmate ID or booking number. Calling the Clerk for live jail housing.
Prior jail booking Pasco County Corrections Past Arrests Name and approximate arrest date. Searching only the current-custody category.
Sheriff incident or arrest report Pasco Sheriff Public Records Report number, date, location and involved name. Requesting a city police report from the Sheriff.
Municipal police report The arresting city police department Agency, report number, event date and location. Assuming every Pasco arrest was made by the Sheriff.
Criminal case docket Pasco County Clerk & Comptroller Court case number or full name and date range. Treating a booking result as the final court result.
Certified court disposition Pasco County Clerk & Comptroller Case number and exact document required. Submitting a screenshot where certification is required.
Active warrant information Pasco Sheriff or issuing agency Full name, birth date and warrant information. Confronting a person or relying only on a similar name.
Statewide Florida criminal history Florida Department of Law Enforcement Accurate demographic search information. Assuming a county search covers all Florida arrests.
Court outcome

How to read a Pasco County criminal court case

The Pasco County Clerk makes felony, misdemeanor and criminal traffic case files available for public viewing unless the case is sealed, expunged, confidential or otherwise restricted by law.

Search by case number whenever possible A case number is more precise than a name and reduces the risk of combining records belonging to different people.
Confirm the criminal division Determine whether the case is felony, misdemeanor, criminal traffic or another case type.
Compare the defendant identifiers Confirm the full name and any publicly displayed demographic information before relying on the docket.
Find the initiating charge document Look for the complaint, information or other filing that states what was formally presented to the court.
Check for amended charges A later filing may replace, reduce or reorganize the original counts.
Read the docket in date order Review hearings, motions, continuances, warrants, orders, plea entries and trial events.
Locate the final disposition document Do not rely on a general “closed” label. Identify the dismissal, nolle prosequi, judgment, verdict or sentencing document.
Order the document when formal proof is required Licensing agencies, courts, employers and immigration matters may require a certified disposition rather than an online docket image.
Common criminal docket terms
Term Practical meaning What to verify
Pending The case has not reached a final disposition. Review the next hearing and newest filing.
Information filed The prosecutor filed formal charging allegations. Read each count rather than relying on the booking charge.
Nolle prosequi The prosecutor announced that a charge would not be pursued at that time. Confirm which counts and defendants the notice covers.
Dismissed A charge or case was dismissed by the court. Check whether every count was dismissed.
Adjudication withheld The court withheld a formal adjudication under the circumstances shown in the case. It is not the same as a dismissal; read the plea and sentencing documents.
Adjudicated guilty A judgment of guilt was entered. Review the judgment, sentence and count numbers.
Acquitted or not guilty The defendant was not found guilty of the count resolved by the verdict. Determine whether another count remained unresolved.
Closed The case is no longer shown as active. Closed alone does not explain why or how the case ended.
Court records and fees

Pasco County criminal record copies, certification and paper files

Published criminal case fees
Service Published charge When to use it
Assisted record search $2 per name per year When Clerk staff must perform a name-and-year search.
Court-document copy $1 per page For ordinary copies from a criminal court file.
Certification $2 per document When official certification is required.
Authenticated certificate $7 When signing and sealing authentication is specifically required.
Exemplified certificate $7 When the receiving institution specifically requests exemplification.
Seal or expunge court file $42 Clerk processing associated with an eligible sealing or expungement case.
Payment-plan contract $25 For a Clerk payment-plan contract when applicable.
Restitution payment $3.50 per payment For restitution payments processed under the published schedule.

Accepted payment methods

Cash for eligible in-person transactions
Bank check
Money order
In-state business check
Personal in-state check with proper identification
American Express, Discover, Mastercard or Visa
Apple Pay or Google Pay where Tap to Pay is accepted
Bank account for eligible online payments
Card service fee: The Clerk publishes a 3.5% service fee for Tap to Pay and credit or debit card transactions. Payments must be in U.S. currency, and cash should not be sent through the mail.

Mailing a check or money order

Make payment payable to Pasco County Clerk & Comptroller
Nikki Alvarez-Sowles
Pasco County Clerk & Comptroller
P.O. Box 338
New Port Richey, FL 34656-0338

E-Certify fees and delivery

$1 per page

Statutory copy fee.

$2

Statutory certification fee.

$6

Convenience fee per electronic certified document.

3.5%

Additional credit-card processing fee.

  • Available electronic certified records can be ordered 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
  • The document includes a Clerk digital signature and tamper-resistant features.
  • The purchased file is available for immediate download and is also sent to the email entered during purchase.
  • If the case or document is not viewable online, obtain it through the appropriate Clerk office.
  • The online document-verification link expires one year after purchase.
  • E-Certify support is available at 727-847-8086, Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m.–5 p.m.

Viewing a paper court file in person

Call ahead when you know the case number

The Clerk recommends requesting the file in advance from the Dade City or New Port Richey records center.

Best times to visit

The Clerk recommends 9–11 a.m. or 2–4 p.m. to avoid the busiest periods.

Large file request: When requesting 12 or more case files, arrive before 3 p.m. Closed files that have met retention requirements may have been destroyed, although some may remain available as filmed records.
East Pasco Records Retention Facility
38319 McDonald Street
Dade City, FL 33525

352-521-4489

Jack Albert Records Retention Facility
8902 Government Drive
New Port Richey, FL 34654-5555

727-847-8962

Warrant safety

How to handle a possible active Pasco County warrant

Search the official Pasco warrant system Use the full legal name and compare all available identifiers.
Check for similar-name risk Common names, suffixes and incomplete birth information can create mistaken matches.
Record the warrant information Save the warrant number, issuing court, case number, charge and displayed status.
Confirm the warrant before acting Online data can lag behind a recall, service, court action or clerical correction.
Use a safe resolution path A person checking their own status should contact a Florida attorney, the issuing court or law enforcement for case-specific instructions.
Never confront or detain a person. Do not visit a residence, workplace or public location to act on a warrant search. Give the information to law enforcement.
Current custody

What to do after finding someone in Pasco County Corrections

Pasco County Corrections
20101 Central Boulevard
Land O’ Lakes, FL 34637
Information to save first

Exact name, inmate ID, booking number, arrest date, every charge, every bond entry and the arresting agency.

Multiple charges

Read every charge separately. A release condition on one count does not resolve another no-bond matter or outside hold.

Pending release

A release status may mean processing is underway. Property return, paperwork and other holds may delay physical exit.

Housing changes

Classification, medical, safety and operational needs can cause reassignment. Confirm current information before traveling.

Before paying, visiting, mailing or creating an account

Verify the inmate’s exact name as displayed
Copy the inmate ID without transposing digits
Confirm the person is still in Pasco custody
Check whether release or transfer is pending
Use only the provider selected by Pasco County
Save transaction receipts and confirmation numbers
Scam check: Do not send money through gift cards, cryptocurrency or a personal payment account because someone claims it will cause immediate release. Verify bonds and approved inmate services independently.
Digital mail

Pasco County inmate mail address and scanning rules

Pasco County Corrections uses ICSolutions digital mail scanning for ordinary personal correspondence. Personal mail is not accepted directly at the Pasco County jail.

Personal mail address
Pasco Inmate Mail Processing
Inmate Name – Inmate ID
P.O. Box 17339
San Antonio, TX 78227
What happens after arrival

The ICS Digital Mail Center scans eligible correspondence so it can be viewed electronically by the inmate.

Addressing checklist

Use the inmate’s full name exactly as listed
Include the correct inmate ID
Use the San Antonio processing address
Place the sender’s full return address on the envelope
Send ordinary paper correspondence that can be scanned
Keep a copy of important personal documents
Unscannable mail: Pasco County states that material that cannot be scanned will be returned to the sender. Legal mail and newspaper or magazine clippings are among the items not eligible for ordinary digital scanning.

Send these through the correct separate process

Legal mail

Do not route privileged legal correspondence through the ordinary personal-mail scanning address. Use the facility’s legal-mail addressing and verification rules.

Publications or clippings

Newspaper and magazine clippings are not eligible for ordinary scanning. Publisher-direct and publication rules may be different.

Money or valuables

Do not place cash, checks, cards or valuables inside ordinary correspondence. Use the approved account-deposit process.

Why the inmate ID matters: A correct name with an incorrect or missing inmate ID can delay delivery or associate the mail with the wrong custody record.
Video visitation

Pasco County video-visit length, cost and preparation

Maximum session

Up to 20 minutes.

Published rate

$0.17 per minute.

Account type

ICS prepaid account.

Scheduling

Completed through the visitation provider.

Monitoring

Facility communication rules apply.

Confirm the inmate remains in Pasco custody Do this before funding an account or selecting an appointment.
Create or sign in to the ICS prepaid account Use accurate personal information because identity or account verification may be required.
Select Pasco County Corrections Search for the inmate using the correct surname and inmate information.
Choose an available session Availability can be affected by housing, court, medical movement, lockdown or facility operations.
Test the device before the appointment Check the camera, microphone, speaker, browser or app permissions and internet connection.
Join early A late connection may reduce the usable session rather than extend the appointment.

Conduct that can interrupt or restrict a visit

Nudity or sexually explicit conduct
Display of weapons, drugs or prohibited activity
Threats, harassment or disruptive behavior
Recording or rebroadcasting contrary to facility rules
Allowing an unauthorized person to participate
Using another person’s account or identification
Cost example: At the published rate of $0.17 per minute, a full 20-minute session costs $3.40 before any separately disclosed taxes, provider charges or account requirements.
Statewide search

When Pasco County records are not broad enough

FDLE Instant Search

Results are available immediately and can be printed or emailed, but the instant result is not certified.

FDLE certified or non-certified search

FDLE staff perform the search. Published processing is five business days for non-certified results and six to seven business days for certified results, excluding mail delivery.

ORI-based search

A valid agency ORI number is required. FDLE cannot supply the ORI; obtain it from the requesting agency or organization.

FDLE criminal-history search costs
Search option Published cost Important limitation
Instant public search $24 plus $1 card-processing fee Immediate result is not certified.
Certified or non-certified staff search $24 Processing time does not include postal delivery.
ORI search Varies by statute, agency or authorized entity A valid ORI from the requesting organization is required.
Personal Review No FDLE fee Only the person or designated attorney may request it; fingerprints are required.
Name-based limitation: A demographic search can return a false positive or miss a record because of aliases, similar names or incomplete identifiers. Follow the fingerprint-based process when the requesting organization requires one.
Error correction

What to do when a Pasco or Florida record is inaccurate

Correct the error at its source
Incorrect information Office to contact Evidence to prepare
Wrong booking identity or custody field Pasco County Corrections Government ID, inmate ID, booking number and explanation of the mismatch.
Incorrect Sheriff incident information Pasco Sheriff Public Records or appropriate unit Report number, official documents and the exact disputed passage.
Incorrect court docket or document index Pasco County Clerk & Comptroller Case number, filed order and exact docket entry at issue.
Incorrect statewide Florida history FDLE Criminal History Record Maintenance Personal Review, fingerprints and certified supporting documents.
Third-party mugshot or people-search page The third-party publisher after the official record is verified Corrected official record, disposition or sealing/expungement order.

FDLE Personal Review

Florida law allows an individual to request a copy of their own Florida criminal-history record to examine its accuracy and challenge incomplete or incorrect information.

There is no FDLE charge for Personal Review
A fingerprint card is required
Fingerprints must be taken by a law-enforcement or criminal-justice agency
Local fingerprinting charges may still apply
Only the individual or designated attorney may request the review
It cannot be used to review another person’s history
Not for employment or licensing proof: FDLE states that a Personal Review record does not contain demographic information and cannot be used for immigration, employment, licensing or certification purposes.
Personal Review mailing address
Florida Department of Law Enforcement
P.O. Box 1489
Tallahassee, FL 32302-1489
Attn: Criminal History Record Maintenance Section
FDLE correction questions

Phone: 850-410-7898

Email: chrm@fdle.state.fl.us

Florida record relief

Pasco County sealing and expungement process

Eligibility is case-specific. A dismissal does not automatically remove the arrest. Certain offenses, adult adjudications, juvenile histories and prior sealing or expungement can affect eligibility.

What the FDLE Certificate of Eligibility application requires

Completed application with full name
Date of birth, race and sex
Mailing and permanent addresses
Arresting agency and arrest date
Every charge included in the request
Signature before a notary or deputy clerk
Certified disposition for each case or charge
Fingerprint card completed by an authorized agency
Required prosecutor statement for expunction applications
$75 nonrefundable FDLE processing fee
Notice to Appear: When a person received a Notice to Appear and was not physically arrested, FDLE instructs the applicant to use the Notice to Appear date in place of the arrest date.

Certified disposition and diversion documentation

  • Obtain a certified disposition for each charge listed on the application.
  • If probation was imposed, include documentation showing termination of probation.
  • For pretrial intervention or another diversion program, a completion certificate or successful-completion letter may substitute for a certified disposition in the circumstances described by FDLE.

Fingerprint-card requirements

Applicant’s full name
Applicant’s date of birth
Applicant’s signature
Date fingerprints were taken
Signature of the fingerprinting official
Agency ORI or official stamp

FDLE payment rules

Amount

$75, nonrefundable.

Accepted

Money order, cashier’s check or completed personal check payable to FDLE.

Not accepted

Cash, gift cards or temporary personal checks.

What happens after FDLE review?

FDLE reviews statutory eligibility FDLE conducts the required state, national and criminal-traffic history checks.
FDLE issues or denies the certificate Current processing is stated as more than 12 weeks, and applications are handled in the order complete packets are received.
The applicant files in the proper court A Certificate of Eligibility does not seal or expunge anything. File the petition, certificate and required affidavit in the court with jurisdiction over the arrest.
The judge decides the petition Even a statutorily eligible applicant is not guaranteed relief. The decision belongs to the court.
A certified order reaches FDLE FDLE acts after receiving a certified copy of the signed sealing or expungement order.
FDLE notifies involved criminal-justice agencies FDLE sends notification after complying with the order so involved agencies can process the relief required by law.
One-record limitation: Florida’s primary judicial sealing and expungement statutes generally allow one arrest record to be sealed or expunged in one proceeding. Directly related arrests may sometimes be included together if the court permits it.
Save documents before expungement: FDLE recommends keeping copies of the arrest report, certified disposition and final order. Agencies are generally prohibited from later releasing court-ordered expunged records without a qualifying court order.
Case notifications

Get Pasco County criminal court reminders

Florida E-Notify allows defendants, interested parties, members of the public and media users to receive upcoming criminal court-event alerts by email, text message or both.

Reminder choices

Select 14-day, seven-day or one-day advance reminders in any combination.

Number of cases

The Clerk states that there is no limit to the number of cases a user may follow.

Account control

Users can add or remove cases and change notification methods or frequency.

Recheck the docket: Notifications are a convenience and do not replace an official notice, attorney instruction or current court docket. Court events can change.
Victim privacy

Protecting crime-victim information in a Pasco court filing

A crime victim, filer, party or affected non-party may file a Notice of Confidential Crime Victim Information within a court filing under the applicable Florida court rule.

What the notice is designed to do

Identify information in a court filing that should receive the confidentiality protection available to a qualifying crime victim.

What it does not automatically do

It does not erase an arrest, close an entire case or replace another confidentiality or sealing process.

Immediate safety concern: A person facing threats, stalking, retaliation or danger should contact law enforcement or emergency services rather than relying only on a court-record confidentiality filing.
Contact directory

Pasco County arrest and criminal-record contacts

Use the contact matched to the task
Office Contact Best reason to contact
Pasco Sheriff Public Records 813-235-6118
PublicRecords@pascosheriff.org
Sheriff incident reports, arrest reports and local Sheriff arrest history.
Sheriff Public Records fax 813-235-6119 Faxed records correspondence when appropriate.
Robert D. Sumner Judicial Center 352-521-4542 East Pasco criminal court inquiries.
West Pasco Judicial Center 727-847-8031 West Pasco criminal court inquiries.
East Pasco Records Retention 352-521-4489 Requesting or viewing paper court files in Dade City.
West Pasco Records Retention 727-847-8962 Requesting or viewing paper court files in New Port Richey.
E-Certify support 727-847-8086 Help with an electronic certified Pasco document.
FDLE Personal Review 850-410-7898
chrm@fdle.state.fl.us
Accuracy review and challenge of an individual’s Florida history.
Clerk office hours: Pasco County Clerk offices publish regular hours of 8:30 a.m.–5 p.m. Eastern Time, Monday through Friday, excluding holidays.
Location

Pasco County Corrections and Sheriff Records area

Pasco County Corrections is located at 20101 Central Boulevard. The Pasco Sheriff Public Records Department is nearby at 20105 Central Boulevard in Land O’ Lakes.

Confirm before traveling: Verify the person’s current custody, the correct building, public access requirements and office hours before leaving home.
Source verification

How the information in this guide was verified

The article was built from Pasco County Corrections inmate-service instructions, Pasco Sheriff public-record contacts and local-history materials, Pasco County Clerk criminal court, paper-file, fee, E-Certify, E-Notify and sealing pages, and FDLE criminal-history, Personal Review and Certificate of Eligibility instructions.

Live information

Custody, booking, warrant and court-event status must still be checked in the live system because these fields can change after publication.

Published procedures

Fees, addresses, mail rules, visit rates and processing requirements were extracted into this page rather than left as unexplained links.

Legal safeguards

Arrest information is described as allegation and custody data, not proof of guilt. Formal legal questions require case-specific advice.

Frequently asked questions

Pasco County arrest-record questions answered

How do I search a current Pasco County inmate?

Open the official Corrections search and select In Custody. Begin with the last name, open all possible matches and verify the inmate ID, birth date or age, arrest date and booking details.

How do I search someone who was released?

Use the Past Arrests category rather than In Custody. Then search the Pasco County criminal court docket to determine whether a case was filed and how it was resolved.

Why does the jail charge differ from the court charge?

The jail displays allegations received during arrest or intake. The State Attorney may later file a different charge, amend a count, reduce it or decline prosecution.

Where can I find a Pasco County mugshot?

A booking photograph may appear in the official current or past arrest result when publicly available. It documents booking and is not evidence of guilt.

How do I obtain the actual arrest narrative?

Request the incident report, arrest report or probable-cause document from the arresting law-enforcement agency. Include the date, location, full name and report or arrest number.

Does the Sheriff provide a complete countywide history?

No. The Sheriff’s local arrest-history form states that it covers arrests conducted by the Pasco Sheriff’s Office. Other agencies and statewide records require separate searches.

How much does a Pasco criminal court copy cost?

The published rate is $1 per page. Certification is $2 per document, and an assisted record search is $2 per name per year.

How much is a Pasco E-Certify order?

The published charges are $1 per page, $2 for certification and a $6 convenience fee per certified document, plus a 3.5% credit-card service fee.

Can I view a criminal court file without paying?

Online court searching and physical viewing are generally available without a copy charge. Fees apply for assisted searches, copies, certification and other services.

What is the Pasco inmate mail address?

Address ordinary personal mail to Pasco Inmate Mail Processing, followed by the inmate’s name and inmate ID, P.O. Box 17339, San Antonio, TX 78227.

How much does a Pasco video visit cost?

Pasco County currently publishes a rate of $0.17 per minute, with sessions lasting up to 20 minutes. A full 20-minute session is $3.40 before any separately disclosed charges.

Why was inmate mail returned?

The name or inmate ID may be wrong, the item may not be scannable, or the correspondence may belong under a different legal-mail or publication process.

How do I find the final outcome of a charge?

Search the Clerk’s criminal docket and locate the dismissal, nolle prosequi, judgment, verdict, plea or sentencing document. A “closed” label alone does not explain the outcome.

How much is an FDLE Florida criminal-history search?

The public search costs $24. The instant option also includes a $1 credit-card processing fee and is not certified.

Can I review my Florida record for free?

Yes. FDLE does not charge for Personal Review, although the applicant must submit fingerprints and the fingerprinting agency may charge its own rolling fee.

How much does the FDLE seal or expunge application cost?

The Certificate of Eligibility application requires a nonrefundable $75 payment to FDLE. The Pasco Clerk separately publishes a $42 fee for sealing or expungement of a court file.

How long does the FDLE eligibility review take?

FDLE currently states that processing is taking more than 12 weeks after a complete application and all required supporting documents are received.

Does an FDLE Certificate of Eligibility erase the record?

No. It only confirms statutory eligibility to petition. The applicant must file the court petition and obtain a signed judicial order.

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