Lubbock Texas Arrests Records, Mugshot, Jail Roster 2026

📍 Updated April 2026 — Lubbock County, TX

Someone you care about was just arrested in Lubbock, or you came across a record on texas.arrests.org and need to know what it actually means. Either way, you need real answers — not generic information that leaves you more confused than when you started. This guide walks you through every step: how to find someone in the Lubbock County Detention Center right now, what those listed charges actually mean, how to post bond, how to visit or send money, and how to use the official government sources that are always more accurate than any third-party website.

Everything here links directly to verified official sources. No guesswork. No broken links. Just a clear, practical path forward — written for real people dealing with a stressful situation in Lubbock, Texas.

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Search Arrests, Inmate & Mugshot Records

⚠️ Important — Read Before You Do Anything

Arrest records — including those on texas.arrests.org — show that a booking happened. They do not show case outcomes, dismissed charges, or current custody status reliably. An arrest is not a conviction. Always verify through the official Lubbock County Sheriff’s Office website or call the Detention Center directly at (806) 775-7009.

1,512
Bed Capacity
LCDC
362
Staff at
Detention Center
2×/day
Magistrate
Appearances
48 hrs
Max Hold Before
Judge Appearance
30 min
Mobile App
Update Interval

How to Find Someone Arrested in Lubbock, Texas — Step-by-Step

When someone gets arrested in Lubbock, they are almost always taken to the Lubbock County Detention Center (LCDC) at 3502 N. Holly Avenue. This is where the official booking roster is held. The fastest and most accurate way to find them is directly through the Sheriff’s Office — not through a third-party aggregator. Here is the exact process:

1

Go to the Official Lubbock County Sheriff Active Jail Roster

Open lubbocksheriff.com/active-jail-roster — this is the only source that reflects real-time custody status at LCDC. You can search by full name, booking number, or Sheriff’s Office (SO) number. Note: the website is not monitored 24/7. For urgent situations, call (806) 775-7009 directly.

2

Search by Last Name Only First

Type only the last name into the search field on your first attempt. Booking officers enter names under pressure and misspellings are extremely common — especially with hyphenated or Spanish-origin names. Searching last name only casts the widest net and prevents you from missing a record because a first name was abbreviated or entered differently.

3

Click the Full Name to See All Booking Details

Once you find a likely match, click their name to open the full profile. You’ll see: mugshot photo, booking date and time, specific charges with statute references, bond amount (updated after magistrate hearing), arrest location, and current housing pod within the facility. Write down the booking number and SO number immediately — you’ll need both for bond posting, phone setup, and commissary deposits.

4

Try the Lubbock Sheriff Mobile App If the Website Is Down

The Lubbock County Sheriff’s Office has an official mobile app for both Android and iPhone. The app includes a Jail Search function that updates every 30 minutes — faster in some cases than the website. Search the app stores for “Lubbock County Sheriff.” It also includes a directory of licensed local bonding agencies.

5

Can’t Find Them? Call the Detention Center Directly

If the person doesn’t appear in the online roster, call (806) 775-7009 or (806) 775-7048. Give them the full legal name and date of birth. A staff member can confirm custody and provide the booking number within minutes. This is faster than any website when the arrest happened in the last few hours.

🔎 Insider Tip — Local Knowledge

If someone was arrested within Lubbock city limits, the Lubbock Police Department (LPD) made the arrest — but they are still typically booked into the same LCDC at 3502 N. Holly. The LPD also operates a city holding facility at 916 Texas Ave where arrestees may be held briefly before transfer. If you can’t find someone in the LCDC roster, call LPD records at (806) 775-4600 to confirm whether they’re still at the city facility before transfer.

📍 Lubbock County Detention Center — 3502 N. Holly Avenue, Lubbock, TX 79403 | (806) 775-7009

Lubbock County Detention Center — Complete Contact & Location Information

The Lubbock County Detention Center is the main county jail and is operated by the Lubbock County Sheriff’s Office under Sheriff Kelly S. Rowe. With 1,512 beds organized in clusters and pods, and staffed by 362 employees including medical and kitchen personnel, it is a full-service detention facility serving all bookings in Lubbock County.

Detail
Information
Facility Name
Lubbock County Detention Center (LCDC)
Physical Address
3502 N. Holly Avenue, Lubbock, TX 79403
Mailing Address
P.O. Box 10535, Lubbock, TX 79408
Inmate Information Line
Sheriff’s Office Main
Sergeant Desk (Concerns)
Detention Email
Active Jail Roster
Sheriff’s Official Site
Bed Capacity
1,512 beds (clusters / pods structure)
Sheriff
Kelly S. Rowe (appointed 2009, re-elected multiple terms)

How to Post Bond After a Lubbock Texas Arrest — Your Complete Options

Understanding bond is one of the most urgent tasks after an arrest. In Lubbock County, a magistrate reviews each arrest and sets bond — this happens at least twice per day at the Detention Center. The bond amount is then updated in the online jail roster. You have three main options for getting someone released:

💵

Cash Bond — Pay 100% Upfront

Pay the full bond amount directly at the LCDC Bond Window. The full amount is refunded after the case concludes (minus any court-ordered fees). Best option if you have the funds — no bondsman fees, no ongoing conditions.

Where: Bond Window, 3502 N. Holly Ave
Hours: Check with facility at (806) 775-7009

🤝

Surety Bond — Use a Bondsman (10%)

Pay a licensed bail bondsman typically 10% of the bond amount (non-refundable). The bondsman guarantees the full amount to the court. Find licensed bondsmen on the official Lubbock Sheriff mobile app or verify any bondsman at tdi.texas.gov.

Standard rate: 10% — non-refundable even if charges are dropped.

📋

Personal Recognizance (PR Bond)

The court releases the person on their own word to appear at all hearings, with no money paid. Magistrates may grant this for first-time, low-level offenses. Your defense attorney can petition for this at the initial magistrate appearance.

Cannot be guaranteed — entirely at the magistrate’s discretion.

⏰ How Long Before Bond Is Set in Lubbock?

Texas law requires every arrested person to appear before a magistrate within 48 hours of arrest. In practice, Lubbock County magistrates conduct initial appearances at least twice daily at the Detention Center — so most people see a magistrate within 12–24 hours. Bond amount is posted in the online jail roster as soon as it’s set. Until the magistrate sets bond, no bond can be posted.

💡 Insider Tip — Lubbock Bondsmen

The Lubbock County Sheriff’s Office mobile app includes a verified list of local surety companies. This is the safest way to find a bondsman — you’re pulling directly from an official source. Never use a bondsman who contacts you unsolicited shortly after an arrest — this is a common scam where families are defrauded. Legitimate bondsmen wait for you to call them.


Lubbock County Jail Visitation — Exact Rules, Hours & How to Schedule

Visiting someone at the Lubbock County Detention Center requires preparation. The facility uses a structured system and violating any rule can result in being denied entry or losing future visitation privileges. Here is everything you need to know:

1

Create a SmartJailMail Account First

Lubbock County Detention Center uses SmartJailMail for visit scheduling. Go to smartjailmail.com and create a free account. Search for the inmate by name once logged in. Both the facility and the inmate must approve you before your first visit — so set this up as early as possible, ideally the same day as the arrest.

2

Know the Visitation Hours

In-person and video visitation is available Sunday through Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 PM. Last check-in for visitation is 9:00 PM. Each visitor may visit an inmate once per day for a timed 20-minute session. Check-in uses the kiosk in the visitation lobby.

3

Bring Valid, Non-Expired Government ID

You must present a valid, non-expired government photo ID at check-in. Accepted: driver’s license, state ID, U.S. passport, military ID. Not accepted if expired: I-94s, border crossing cards, green cards, work authorization cards. Visitors on the approved list only — confirm you’ve been approved before making the drive.

4

Children in Visitation — Rules Are Strict

Each inmate is allowed one adult visitor per visit. Up to two children may accompany the adult visitor, but they must be under control at all times — no running, climbing, or yelling. No food, gum, candy, drinks, cell phones, purses, backpacks, pens, or bags of any kind are allowed into visitation rooms.

5

Video Visits — Remote Option Available

If you can’t visit in person, remote video visits are available through SmartJailMail from your phone, tablet, or computer. This is especially useful for family members outside Lubbock. The inmate and the facility must still approve you through your SmartJailMail account first.

⚠️ Critical — Everything Is Monitored and Recorded

Every phone call, video visit, and letter from the Lubbock County Detention Center is monitored and recorded. The Lubbock County District Attorney’s Office actively reviews inmate communications. Never discuss what happened, legal strategy, or case details on any jail communication — only logistics like finding an attorney, childcare, and bills. Only attorney-client calls are protected.


How to Send Money and Care Packages to Lubbock County Inmates

Inmates at LCDC have two separate accounts: a commissary account (for food, hygiene products, clothing items from the jail store) and a phone/prepaid account (for outbound calls through ICSolutions). You must fund them separately. Here’s exactly how:

💰

Commissary Deposits — AccessCorrections

Primary method for commissary deposits. Deposit online, by phone, or at the kiosk in the main lobby of LCDC (3502 N. Holly Ave). You’ll need the inmate’s full legal name and booking number.

accesscorrections.com →
📞

Phone Account — ICSolutions

Lubbock County Detention Center uses ICSolutions for the inmate phone system. Fund a prepaid account before they try to call you — otherwise the call disconnects. Call (888) 506-8407 to set up by phone.

icsolutions.com →
📦

Care Packages — Access Securepak

Send approved care packages to inmates through Access Securepak — developed to eliminate contraband. Family members create an account and purchase packages for delivery to LCDC. Cash and money orders are NOT accepted through the mail.

accesssecurepak.com →
💌

Digital Messages & Photos — SmartJailMail

Send digital messages, photos, and schedule video visits through SmartJailMail. Inmates receive messages on their assigned tablet. All messages are read by staff — never discuss case details.

smartjailmail.com →
💡 Insider Tip — Phone Account Timing

During booking, Lubbock County gives each inmate at least one free call to a family member, friend, or bond company. If you miss that call, immediately go to icsolutions.com and fund a prepaid account linked to your phone number. Incoming collect calls require that your landline accepts them — most mobile plans do not accept collect calls, making the prepaid account the only practical option for cell phone users.


Lubbock County Arrest Records & Court Case Search — Official Sources

Finding the arrest record is step one. The next step — equally important — is finding out what happened in court after the arrest. Lubbock County has multiple court systems depending on the charge level. Here is exactly where to look for each type of case:

Case Type
Where to Search
Contact
Active Jail Roster (Current Inmates)
Felony Cases (District Court)
Misdemeanor Cases (County Clerk)
Texas State Prison (TDCJ)
Texas DPS Criminal History (Certified)
Online Police Reports (LPD)
Court Dockets (Register)
📋 How to Search Felony Cases in Lubbock — Case Number Format

When searching for a felony case in the Lubbock County District Court system, use this format: DC-2024-CR-XXXX (4-digit number at the end, with hyphens). For magistrate cases: PFF-2024-MAG-XXXX. You must register a free account at publicrecords.lubbockcounty.gov/Portal before searching. If you don’t have the case number yet, call the District Clerk at (806) 775-1577.

Lubbock’s Six District Courts — Which One Has Your Case?

Lubbock County has six district courts handling felony criminal cases. Cases are assigned by the court system automatically. The courts are: 72nd District (Judge John C. Grace), 99th District (Judge Phillip Hays), 137th District (Judge John J. McClendon III), 140th District (Judge Douglas H. Freitag), 237th District (Judge Les Hatch), and 364th District (Judge William R. Eichman II). If you don’t know which court has the case, call the District Clerk at (806) 775-1577 with the defendant’s name — they will identify the assigned court.


Why Someone Doesn’t Show Up in the Lubbock Arrest Search — 6 Real Reasons

This is one of the most stressful situations — you know someone was arrested but can’t find them anywhere. Before panicking, work through this list systematically:

Too Recent — Data Lag

The LCDC website updates regularly but not instantly. If the arrest happened in the last few hours, the record may not be live yet. Fix: Call (806) 775-7009 directly.

🏙️

Still at LPD City Jail

If arrested by Lubbock Police Department, the person may still be at the city holding facility at 916 Texas Ave before transfer to LCDC. Fix: Call LPD at (806) 775-4600.

📝

Name Spelled Differently

Booking officers work under pressure and typos are common. Try all spelling variations and search by last name only. Try middle name as first name. Try nickname. Hispanic names are especially prone to variation.

🏛️

Transferred to TDCJ

If the person was sentenced and transferred to the state prison system, they no longer appear in the county roster. Fix: Search TDCJ Offender Search.

🔒

Federal Custody

If arrested by FBI, DEA, ATF, or ICE, the person goes into federal — not county — custody. Fix: Search Federal Bureau of Prisons inmate locator.

Already Released

Released inmates are removed from the active roster. They may have posted bond and been released before the roster even populated. Fix: Call the booking desk to confirm release.


Lubbock Texas Arrests Scams — Warning Signs Every Family Should Know

The hours immediately after an arrest are the most vulnerable time for families. Scammers specifically target people who just had a loved one booked, knowing they’re stressed and looking for fast answers. Lubbock is not immune. Here are the red flags every family needs to recognize immediately:

  • Anyone demanding payment via gift card, Zelle, CashApp, Venmo, or Bitcoin for “bail” or “jail fees”
  • Unsolicited calls claiming your family member is in danger at the Lubbock County Detention Center
  • A bondsman appearing at your door — you didn’t call them, they somehow know about the arrest
  • “Pay in the next 30 minutes or bail doubles” — extreme pressure tactics
  • Any website charging $49–$199 to “remove your Lubbock mugshot” immediately
  • Emails or texts with links claiming to be from “Lubbock County Sheriff” or “Texas courts”
  • Anyone who says they need access to your bank account or SSN to post bail
  • Services claiming they can get charges dropped for a fee before an attorney is involved
✅ How Real Lubbock Bail Process Works

Legitimate bail is paid at the Bond Window inside the Lubbock County Detention Center (3502 N. Holly Ave) or through a licensed bondsman you contact yourself. The LCSO never calls families to demand emergency payment. Licensed bondsmen in Lubbock can be verified at tdi.texas.gov — the Texas Department of Insurance. Always verify before paying anyone.


What Happens After a Lubbock Arrest — The Full Legal Process Explained

Understanding the legal process after a Lubbock County arrest helps families make better decisions and avoid mistakes that can hurt the case. Here is what actually happens, step by step, from booking to resolution:

1

Booking at Lubbock County Detention Center

The arrested person is photographed, fingerprinted, and their personal property is catalogued and stored. Charges are entered into the system — these are initial charges and may not reflect the final charges the DA files. The inmate receives one free phone call and access to their tablet within the facility for subsequent contact.

2

Magistrate Appearance (Within 48 Hours)

Texas law guarantees a magistrate appearance within 48 hours — in Lubbock this typically happens within 12–24 hours since magistrates visit LCDC at least twice daily. The magistrate informs the person of the charges against them, reads them their rights (right to attorney, right to remain silent), and sets the initial bond amount. The bond is then posted on the online roster.

3

DA Review — Charges May Change

The arresting officer presents the case to the Lubbock County District Attorney’s Office. The DA independently decides whether to file formal charges — and at what level. The DA can upgrade, downgrade, or drop charges entirely. This is why the charges on the jail roster at the time of arrest may look very different from the formal charges filed. For felonies, charges are filed by Indictment; for misdemeanors, by Information or Complaint.

4

Arraignment — First Court Appearance

At arraignment, the defendant receives a copy of the formal charges and has the opportunity to hear them read in open court. This is also where a defense attorney should already be involved. If the person cannot afford an attorney, the Lubbock Private Defenders Office (LPDO) may be appointed — they handle indigent defense in Lubbock County.

5

Pre-Trial, Plea, or Trial

Most cases in Lubbock County resolve through plea agreements. If the case goes to trial, it is heard in one of the six Lubbock District Courts (for felonies) or County Courts at Law (for misdemeanors). Track case status and court dates through the Lubbock County Public Records Portal.

🎓 Local Insider — Lubbock Private Defenders Office

One thing many Lubbock families don’t know: the Lubbock Private Defenders Office (LPDO) at lpdo.org provides a detailed plain-English guide for anyone arrested in Lubbock County — covering everything from booking to trial. If a public defender is appointed, they operate out of this office. For family members who want to understand the process without paying a private attorney just for information, this is an underused and extremely valuable free resource.


Complete Resource Directory — All Official Lubbock Arrest Links, Phones & Addresses

🔍 Inmate Search & Arrest Records

🏛️
Lubbock Active Jail Roster Real-time — Official LCSO
📋
Lubbock County Sheriff Dept Official county government
🌐
TDCJ State Offender Search All 104 TX state prisons
🔎
Federal BOP Inmate Locator For federal custody only

⚖️ Court Records & Case Search

📂
Lubbock County Public Records Portal Register free — Felony & civil cases
⚖️
Criminal Court Records (Misdemeanor) Lubbock County Clerk — (806) 775-1046
🏛️
Texas Courts Online Statewide case outcomes
🔐
TX DPS Criminal History Certified records — $1/search

💰 Bond, Money & Communication

💵
AccessCorrections (Commissary) Fund inmate commissary account
📞
ICSolutions (Phone Account) Fund prepaid calling — (888) 506-8407
📦
Access Securepak (Care Packages) Send approved care packages
📹
SmartJailMail (Visits & Messages) Schedule visits, send photos/messages
Verify Bondsman — TX Dept of Insurance Confirm bail bondsman is licensed

⚖️ Legal Help & Defense Resources

👨‍⚖️
Lubbock Private Defenders Office Indigent defense — Free guide for families
📱
Texas Bar Lawyer Referral (800) 504-2092 — Find criminal defense attorney
🏛️
TX Expungement Guide (State Law Library) Check eligibility to clear your record

Lubbock Texas Arrests — Frequently Asked Questions

How do I find someone arrested in Lubbock, Texas right now?
Go directly to lubbocksheriff.com/active-jail-roster — the official Lubbock County Sheriff’s Office inmate search. Search by last name only first for the widest results. You can also search by booking number or SO number. If the arrest happened in the last few hours and the person doesn’t appear, call the Detention Center directly at (806) 775-7009 — they can confirm custody by name and date of birth within minutes.
Is texas.arrests.org the same as the official Lubbock jail roster?
No. Texas.arrests.org is a private, third-party website with no government affiliation. It scrapes publicly available data from official county sheriff websites and republishes it — with a lag of 6–18 hours. The official source is the Lubbock County Sheriff’s Office at lubbocksheriff.com/active-jail-roster. That roster reflects real-time custody status. Never make bail, legal, or personal decisions based solely on what you see on third-party aggregator sites like arrests.org.
How long does it take to set bond after a Lubbock arrest?
Texas law requires a magistrate appearance within 48 hours of arrest. In Lubbock County, magistrates conduct initial appearances at least twice daily at the Detention Center, so most people see a magistrate within 12–24 hours. Bond is set at this appearance and updated in the online jail roster immediately. No bond can be posted until the magistrate sets it — if someone says they need money before the magistrate appearance, that is not how the process works.
What are the Lubbock County Detention Center visitation hours?
Visitation is available Sunday through Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 PM (last check-in at 9:00 PM). Each adult visitor may visit once per day for a 20-minute timed session. One adult and up to two children per visit. You must be pre-approved through your SmartJailMail account at smartjailmail.com before visiting. Remote video visits are also available through the same platform for family members outside Lubbock.
How do I send money to an inmate at the Lubbock County Detention Center?
Lubbock County uses AccessCorrections for commissary deposits — go to accesscorrections.com or use the kiosk in the main lobby at 3502 N. Holly Ave. For phone account funding, use ICSolutions at icsolutions.com or call (888) 506-8407. These are two separate accounts — fund both if you want the inmate to both buy commissary items and make phone calls. Cash and money orders are NOT accepted by mail.
What’s the difference between Lubbock Police Department and the Lubbock County Sheriff for arrests?
The Lubbock Police Department (LPD) handles arrests within Lubbock city limits. The Lubbock County Sheriff’s Office (LCSO) handles unincorporated areas outside the city. Both agencies book arrestees into the Lubbock County Detention Center at 3502 N. Holly Ave in most cases. However, LPD also has a city holding facility at 916 Texas Ave where someone may be held briefly before transfer. If you can’t find someone, check both: LCSO at (806) 775-1600 and LPD at (806) 775-4600.
How do I find Lubbock County court case records and case outcomes after an arrest?
Register for a free account at publicrecords.lubbockcounty.gov/Portal for access to felony District Court records. For misdemeanor cases, contact the Lubbock County Clerk at (806) 775-1046. Felony case numbers use the format DC-2024-CR-XXXX. For statewide Texas court records and case outcomes, search txcourts.gov. Remember: the jail roster never shows what happened after the arrest — you need the court system to see that.
Are jail communications in Lubbock monitored?
Yes — completely. Every phone call, video visit, and letter at the Lubbock County Detention Center is monitored and recorded. The District Attorney’s Office actively reviews these communications. Only attorney-client conversations have legal protection. Never discuss the details of what happened, evidence, or legal strategy on any jail phone call, video visit, or letter. Treat every communication as if a prosecutor is reading or hearing it — because in Lubbock County, they may well be.
Legal Disclaimer: This page is an independent informational resource about Lubbock Texas arrests and is not affiliated with, operated by, or endorsed by the Lubbock County Sheriff’s Office, the Lubbock Police Department, Lubbock County government, Texas.Arrests.org, or any government agency. All official links have been verified as active at the time of publication (April 2026). An arrest is not a conviction. All persons are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. This is not legal advice. For legal counsel, contact a licensed Texas criminal defense attorney. Texas State Bar Lawyer Referral: 1-800-504-2092. For complaints about jail conditions, contact the Texas Commission on Jail Standards. Last updated: April 2026.
📍 Updated April 2026 — Lubbock County, TX

Someone you care about was just arrested in Lubbock, or you came across a record on texas.arrests.org and need to know what it actually means. Either way, you need real answers — not generic information that leaves you more confused than when you started. This guide walks you through every step: how to find someone in the Lubbock County Detention Center right now, what those listed charges actually mean, how to post bond, how to visit or send money, and how to use the official government sources that are always more accurate than any third-party website.

Everything here links directly to verified official sources. No guesswork. No broken links. Just a clear, practical path forward — written for real people dealing with a stressful situation in Lubbock, Texas.

⚠️ Important — Read Before You Do Anything

Arrest records — including those on texas.arrests.org — show that a booking happened. They do not show case outcomes, dismissed charges, or current custody status reliably. An arrest is not a conviction. Always verify through the official Lubbock County Sheriff’s Office website or call the Detention Center directly at (806) 775-7009.

1,512
Bed Capacity
LCDC
362
Staff at
Detention Center
2×/day
Magistrate
Appearances
48 hrs
Max Hold Before
Judge Appearance
30 min
Mobile App
Update Interval

How to Find Someone Arrested in Lubbock, Texas — Step-by-Step

When someone gets arrested in Lubbock, they are almost always taken to the Lubbock County Detention Center (LCDC) at 3502 N. Holly Avenue. This is where the official booking roster is held. The fastest and most accurate way to find them is directly through the Sheriff’s Office — not through a third-party aggregator. Here is the exact process:

1

Go to the Official Lubbock County Sheriff Active Jail Roster

Open lubbocksheriff.com/active-jail-roster — this is the only source that reflects real-time custody status at LCDC. You can search by full name, booking number, or Sheriff’s Office (SO) number. Note: the website is not monitored 24/7. For urgent situations, call (806) 775-7009 directly.

2

Search by Last Name Only First

Type only the last name into the search field on your first attempt. Booking officers enter names under pressure and misspellings are extremely common — especially with hyphenated or Spanish-origin names. Searching last name only casts the widest net and prevents you from missing a record because a first name was abbreviated or entered differently.

3

Click the Full Name to See All Booking Details

Once you find a likely match, click their name to open the full profile. You’ll see: mugshot photo, booking date and time, specific charges with statute references, bond amount (updated after magistrate hearing), arrest location, and current housing pod within the facility. Write down the booking number and SO number immediately — you’ll need both for bond posting, phone setup, and commissary deposits.

4

Try the Lubbock Sheriff Mobile App If the Website Is Down

The Lubbock County Sheriff’s Office has an official mobile app for both Android and iPhone. The app includes a Jail Search function that updates every 30 minutes — faster in some cases than the website. Search the app stores for “Lubbock County Sheriff.” It also includes a directory of licensed local bonding agencies.

5

Can’t Find Them? Call the Detention Center Directly

If the person doesn’t appear in the online roster, call (806) 775-7009 or (806) 775-7048. Give them the full legal name and date of birth. A staff member can confirm custody and provide the booking number within minutes. This is faster than any website when the arrest happened in the last few hours.

🔎 Insider Tip — Local Knowledge

If someone was arrested within Lubbock city limits, the Lubbock Police Department (LPD) made the arrest — but they are still typically booked into the same LCDC at 3502 N. Holly. The LPD also operates a city holding facility at 916 Texas Ave where arrestees may be held briefly before transfer. If you can’t find someone in the LCDC roster, call LPD records at (806) 775-4600 to confirm whether they’re still at the city facility before transfer.

📍 Lubbock County Detention Center — 3502 N. Holly Avenue, Lubbock, TX 79403 | (806) 775-7009

Lubbock County Detention Center — Complete Contact & Location Information

The Lubbock County Detention Center is the main county jail and is operated by the Lubbock County Sheriff’s Office under Sheriff Kelly S. Rowe. With 1,512 beds organized in clusters and pods, and staffed by 362 employees including medical and kitchen personnel, it is a full-service detention facility serving all bookings in Lubbock County.

Detail
Information
Facility Name
Lubbock County Detention Center (LCDC)
Physical Address
3502 N. Holly Avenue, Lubbock, TX 79403
Mailing Address
P.O. Box 10535, Lubbock, TX 79408
Inmate Information Line
Sheriff’s Office Main
Sergeant Desk (Concerns)
Detention Email
Active Jail Roster
Sheriff’s Official Site
Bed Capacity
1,512 beds (clusters / pods structure)
Sheriff
Kelly S. Rowe (appointed 2009, re-elected multiple terms)

How to Post Bond After a Lubbock Texas Arrest — Your Complete Options

Understanding bond is one of the most urgent tasks after an arrest. In Lubbock County, a magistrate reviews each arrest and sets bond — this happens at least twice per day at the Detention Center. The bond amount is then updated in the online jail roster. You have three main options for getting someone released:

💵

Cash Bond — Pay 100% Upfront

Pay the full bond amount directly at the LCDC Bond Window. The full amount is refunded after the case concludes (minus any court-ordered fees). Best option if you have the funds — no bondsman fees, no ongoing conditions.

Where: Bond Window, 3502 N. Holly Ave
Hours: Check with facility at (806) 775-7009

🤝

Surety Bond — Use a Bondsman (10%)

Pay a licensed bail bondsman typically 10% of the bond amount (non-refundable). The bondsman guarantees the full amount to the court. Find licensed bondsmen on the official Lubbock Sheriff mobile app or verify any bondsman at tdi.texas.gov.

Standard rate: 10% — non-refundable even if charges are dropped.

📋

Personal Recognizance (PR Bond)

The court releases the person on their own word to appear at all hearings, with no money paid. Magistrates may grant this for first-time, low-level offenses. Your defense attorney can petition for this at the initial magistrate appearance.

Cannot be guaranteed — entirely at the magistrate’s discretion.

⏰ How Long Before Bond Is Set in Lubbock?

Texas law requires every arrested person to appear before a magistrate within 48 hours of arrest. In practice, Lubbock County magistrates conduct initial appearances at least twice daily at the Detention Center — so most people see a magistrate within 12–24 hours. Bond amount is posted in the online jail roster as soon as it’s set. Until the magistrate sets bond, no bond can be posted.

💡 Insider Tip — Lubbock Bondsmen

The Lubbock County Sheriff’s Office mobile app includes a verified list of local surety companies. This is the safest way to find a bondsman — you’re pulling directly from an official source. Never use a bondsman who contacts you unsolicited shortly after an arrest — this is a common scam where families are defrauded. Legitimate bondsmen wait for you to call them.


Lubbock County Jail Visitation — Exact Rules, Hours & How to Schedule

Visiting someone at the Lubbock County Detention Center requires preparation. The facility uses a structured system and violating any rule can result in being denied entry or losing future visitation privileges. Here is everything you need to know:

1

Create a SmartJailMail Account First

Lubbock County Detention Center uses SmartJailMail for visit scheduling. Go to smartjailmail.com and create a free account. Search for the inmate by name once logged in. Both the facility and the inmate must approve you before your first visit — so set this up as early as possible, ideally the same day as the arrest.

2

Know the Visitation Hours

In-person and video visitation is available Sunday through Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 PM. Last check-in for visitation is 9:00 PM. Each visitor may visit an inmate once per day for a timed 20-minute session. Check-in uses the kiosk in the visitation lobby.

3

Bring Valid, Non-Expired Government ID

You must present a valid, non-expired government photo ID at check-in. Accepted: driver’s license, state ID, U.S. passport, military ID. Not accepted if expired: I-94s, border crossing cards, green cards, work authorization cards. Visitors on the approved list only — confirm you’ve been approved before making the drive.

4

Children in Visitation — Rules Are Strict

Each inmate is allowed one adult visitor per visit. Up to two children may accompany the adult visitor, but they must be under control at all times — no running, climbing, or yelling. No food, gum, candy, drinks, cell phones, purses, backpacks, pens, or bags of any kind are allowed into visitation rooms.

5

Video Visits — Remote Option Available

If you can’t visit in person, remote video visits are available through SmartJailMail from your phone, tablet, or computer. This is especially useful for family members outside Lubbock. The inmate and the facility must still approve you through your SmartJailMail account first.

⚠️ Critical — Everything Is Monitored and Recorded

Every phone call, video visit, and letter from the Lubbock County Detention Center is monitored and recorded. The Lubbock County District Attorney’s Office actively reviews inmate communications. Never discuss what happened, legal strategy, or case details on any jail communication — only logistics like finding an attorney, childcare, and bills. Only attorney-client calls are protected.


How to Send Money and Care Packages to Lubbock County Inmates

Inmates at LCDC have two separate accounts: a commissary account (for food, hygiene products, clothing items from the jail store) and a phone/prepaid account (for outbound calls through ICSolutions). You must fund them separately. Here’s exactly how:

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Commissary Deposits — AccessCorrections

Primary method for commissary deposits. Deposit online, by phone, or at the kiosk in the main lobby of LCDC (3502 N. Holly Ave). You’ll need the inmate’s full legal name and booking number.

accesscorrections.com →
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Phone Account — ICSolutions

Lubbock County Detention Center uses ICSolutions for the inmate phone system. Fund a prepaid account before they try to call you — otherwise the call disconnects. Call (888) 506-8407 to set up by phone.

icsolutions.com →
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Care Packages — Access Securepak

Send approved care packages to inmates through Access Securepak — developed to eliminate contraband. Family members create an account and purchase packages for delivery to LCDC. Cash and money orders are NOT accepted through the mail.

accesssecurepak.com →
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Digital Messages & Photos — SmartJailMail

Send digital messages, photos, and schedule video visits through SmartJailMail. Inmates receive messages on their assigned tablet. All messages are read by staff — never discuss case details.

smartjailmail.com →
💡 Insider Tip — Phone Account Timing

During booking, Lubbock County gives each inmate at least one free call to a family member, friend, or bond company. If you miss that call, immediately go to icsolutions.com and fund a prepaid account linked to your phone number. Incoming collect calls require that your landline accepts them — most mobile plans do not accept collect calls, making the prepaid account the only practical option for cell phone users.


Lubbock County Arrest Records & Court Case Search — Official Sources

Finding the arrest record is step one. The next step — equally important — is finding out what happened in court after the arrest. Lubbock County has multiple court systems depending on the charge level. Here is exactly where to look for each type of case:

Case Type
Where to Search
Contact
Active Jail Roster (Current Inmates)
Felony Cases (District Court)
Misdemeanor Cases (County Clerk)
Texas State Prison (TDCJ)
Texas DPS Criminal History (Certified)
Online Police Reports (LPD)
Court Dockets (Register)
📋 How to Search Felony Cases in Lubbock — Case Number Format

When searching for a felony case in the Lubbock County District Court system, use this format: DC-2024-CR-XXXX (4-digit number at the end, with hyphens). For magistrate cases: PFF-2024-MAG-XXXX. You must register a free account at publicrecords.lubbockcounty.gov/Portal before searching. If you don’t have the case number yet, call the District Clerk at (806) 775-1577.

Lubbock’s Six District Courts — Which One Has Your Case?

Lubbock County has six district courts handling felony criminal cases. Cases are assigned by the court system automatically. The courts are: 72nd District (Judge John C. Grace), 99th District (Judge Phillip Hays), 137th District (Judge John J. McClendon III), 140th District (Judge Douglas H. Freitag), 237th District (Judge Les Hatch), and 364th District (Judge William R. Eichman II). If you don’t know which court has the case, call the District Clerk at (806) 775-1577 with the defendant’s name — they will identify the assigned court.


Why Someone Doesn’t Show Up in the Lubbock Arrest Search — 6 Real Reasons

This is one of the most stressful situations — you know someone was arrested but can’t find them anywhere. Before panicking, work through this list systematically:

Too Recent — Data Lag

The LCDC website updates regularly but not instantly. If the arrest happened in the last few hours, the record may not be live yet. Fix: Call (806) 775-7009 directly.

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Still at LPD City Jail

If arrested by Lubbock Police Department, the person may still be at the city holding facility at 916 Texas Ave before transfer to LCDC. Fix: Call LPD at (806) 775-4600.

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Name Spelled Differently

Booking officers work under pressure and typos are common. Try all spelling variations and search by last name only. Try middle name as first name. Try nickname. Hispanic names are especially prone to variation.

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Transferred to TDCJ

If the person was sentenced and transferred to the state prison system, they no longer appear in the county roster. Fix: Search TDCJ Offender Search.

🔒

Federal Custody

If arrested by FBI, DEA, ATF, or ICE, the person goes into federal — not county — custody. Fix: Search Federal Bureau of Prisons inmate locator.

Already Released

Released inmates are removed from the active roster. They may have posted bond and been released before the roster even populated. Fix: Call the booking desk to confirm release.


Lubbock Texas Arrests Scams — Warning Signs Every Family Should Know

The hours immediately after an arrest are the most vulnerable time for families. Scammers specifically target people who just had a loved one booked, knowing they’re stressed and looking for fast answers. Lubbock is not immune. Here are the red flags every family needs to recognize immediately:

  • Anyone demanding payment via gift card, Zelle, CashApp, Venmo, or Bitcoin for “bail” or “jail fees”
  • Unsolicited calls claiming your family member is in danger at the Lubbock County Detention Center
  • A bondsman appearing at your door — you didn’t call them, they somehow know about the arrest
  • “Pay in the next 30 minutes or bail doubles” — extreme pressure tactics
  • Any website charging $49–$199 to “remove your Lubbock mugshot” immediately
  • Emails or texts with links claiming to be from “Lubbock County Sheriff” or “Texas courts”
  • Anyone who says they need access to your bank account or SSN to post bail
  • Services claiming they can get charges dropped for a fee before an attorney is involved
✅ How Real Lubbock Bail Process Works

Legitimate bail is paid at the Bond Window inside the Lubbock County Detention Center (3502 N. Holly Ave) or through a licensed bondsman you contact yourself. The LCSO never calls families to demand emergency payment. Licensed bondsmen in Lubbock can be verified at tdi.texas.gov — the Texas Department of Insurance. Always verify before paying anyone.


What Happens After a Lubbock Arrest — The Full Legal Process Explained

Understanding the legal process after a Lubbock County arrest helps families make better decisions and avoid mistakes that can hurt the case. Here is what actually happens, step by step, from booking to resolution:

1

Booking at Lubbock County Detention Center

The arrested person is photographed, fingerprinted, and their personal property is catalogued and stored. Charges are entered into the system — these are initial charges and may not reflect the final charges the DA files. The inmate receives one free phone call and access to their tablet within the facility for subsequent contact.

2

Magistrate Appearance (Within 48 Hours)

Texas law guarantees a magistrate appearance within 48 hours — in Lubbock this typically happens within 12–24 hours since magistrates visit LCDC at least twice daily. The magistrate informs the person of the charges against them, reads them their rights (right to attorney, right to remain silent), and sets the initial bond amount. The bond is then posted on the online roster.

3

DA Review — Charges May Change

The arresting officer presents the case to the Lubbock County District Attorney’s Office. The DA independently decides whether to file formal charges — and at what level. The DA can upgrade, downgrade, or drop charges entirely. This is why the charges on the jail roster at the time of arrest may look very different from the formal charges filed. For felonies, charges are filed by Indictment; for misdemeanors, by Information or Complaint.

4

Arraignment — First Court Appearance

At arraignment, the defendant receives a copy of the formal charges and has the opportunity to hear them read in open court. This is also where a defense attorney should already be involved. If the person cannot afford an attorney, the Lubbock Private Defenders Office (LPDO) may be appointed — they handle indigent defense in Lubbock County.

5

Pre-Trial, Plea, or Trial

Most cases in Lubbock County resolve through plea agreements. If the case goes to trial, it is heard in one of the six Lubbock District Courts (for felonies) or County Courts at Law (for misdemeanors). Track case status and court dates through the Lubbock County Public Records Portal.

🎓 Local Insider — Lubbock Private Defenders Office

One thing many Lubbock families don’t know: the Lubbock Private Defenders Office (LPDO) at lpdo.org provides a detailed plain-English guide for anyone arrested in Lubbock County — covering everything from booking to trial. If a public defender is appointed, they operate out of this office. For family members who want to understand the process without paying a private attorney just for information, this is an underused and extremely valuable free resource.


Complete Resource Directory — All Official Lubbock Arrest Links, Phones & Addresses

🔍 Inmate Search & Arrest Records

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Lubbock Active Jail Roster Real-time — Official LCSO
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Lubbock County Sheriff Dept Official county government
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TDCJ State Offender Search All 104 TX state prisons
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Federal BOP Inmate Locator For federal custody only

⚖️ Court Records & Case Search

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Lubbock County Public Records Portal Register free — Felony & civil cases
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Criminal Court Records (Misdemeanor) Lubbock County Clerk — (806) 775-1046
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Texas Courts Online Statewide case outcomes
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TX DPS Criminal History Certified records — $1/search

💰 Bond, Money & Communication

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AccessCorrections (Commissary) Fund inmate commissary account
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ICSolutions (Phone Account) Fund prepaid calling — (888) 506-8407
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Access Securepak (Care Packages) Send approved care packages
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SmartJailMail (Visits & Messages) Schedule visits, send photos/messages
Verify Bondsman — TX Dept of Insurance Confirm bail bondsman is licensed

⚖️ Legal Help & Defense Resources

👨‍⚖️
Lubbock Private Defenders Office Indigent defense — Free guide for families
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Texas Bar Lawyer Referral (800) 504-2092 — Find criminal defense attorney
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TX Expungement Guide (State Law Library) Check eligibility to clear your record

Lubbock Texas Arrests — Frequently Asked Questions

How do I find someone arrested in Lubbock, Texas right now?
Go directly to lubbocksheriff.com/active-jail-roster — the official Lubbock County Sheriff’s Office inmate search. Search by last name only first for the widest results. You can also search by booking number or SO number. If the arrest happened in the last few hours and the person doesn’t appear, call the Detention Center directly at (806) 775-7009 — they can confirm custody by name and date of birth within minutes.
Is texas.arrests.org the same as the official Lubbock jail roster?
No. Texas.arrests.org is a private, third-party website with no government affiliation. It scrapes publicly available data from official county sheriff websites and republishes it — with a lag of 6–18 hours. The official source is the Lubbock County Sheriff’s Office at lubbocksheriff.com/active-jail-roster. That roster reflects real-time custody status. Never make bail, legal, or personal decisions based solely on what you see on third-party aggregator sites like arrests.org.
How long does it take to set bond after a Lubbock arrest?
Texas law requires a magistrate appearance within 48 hours of arrest. In Lubbock County, magistrates conduct initial appearances at least twice daily at the Detention Center, so most people see a magistrate within 12–24 hours. Bond is set at this appearance and updated in the online jail roster immediately. No bond can be posted until the magistrate sets it — if someone says they need money before the magistrate appearance, that is not how the process works.
What are the Lubbock County Detention Center visitation hours?
Visitation is available Sunday through Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 PM (last check-in at 9:00 PM). Each adult visitor may visit once per day for a 20-minute timed session. One adult and up to two children per visit. You must be pre-approved through your SmartJailMail account at smartjailmail.com before visiting. Remote video visits are also available through the same platform for family members outside Lubbock.
How do I send money to an inmate at the Lubbock County Detention Center?
Lubbock County uses AccessCorrections for commissary deposits — go to accesscorrections.com or use the kiosk in the main lobby at 3502 N. Holly Ave. For phone account funding, use ICSolutions at icsolutions.com or call (888) 506-8407. These are two separate accounts — fund both if you want the inmate to both buy commissary items and make phone calls. Cash and money orders are NOT accepted by mail.
What’s the difference between Lubbock Police Department and the Lubbock County Sheriff for arrests?
The Lubbock Police Department (LPD) handles arrests within Lubbock city limits. The Lubbock County Sheriff’s Office (LCSO) handles unincorporated areas outside the city. Both agencies book arrestees into the Lubbock County Detention Center at 3502 N. Holly Ave in most cases. However, LPD also has a city holding facility at 916 Texas Ave where someone may be held briefly before transfer. If you can’t find someone, check both: LCSO at (806) 775-1600 and LPD at (806) 775-4600.
How do I find Lubbock County court case records and case outcomes after an arrest?
Register for a free account at publicrecords.lubbockcounty.gov/Portal for access to felony District Court records. For misdemeanor cases, contact the Lubbock County Clerk at (806) 775-1046. Felony case numbers use the format DC-2024-CR-XXXX. For statewide Texas court records and case outcomes, search txcourts.gov. Remember: the jail roster never shows what happened after the arrest — you need the court system to see that.
Are jail communications in Lubbock monitored?
Yes — completely. Every phone call, video visit, and letter at the Lubbock County Detention Center is monitored and recorded. The District Attorney’s Office actively reviews these communications. Only attorney-client conversations have legal protection. Never discuss the details of what happened, evidence, or legal strategy on any jail phone call, video visit, or letter. Treat every communication as if a prosecutor is reading or hearing it — because in Lubbock County, they may well be.
Legal Disclaimer: This page is an independent informational resource about Lubbock Texas arrests and is not affiliated with, operated by, or endorsed by the Lubbock County Sheriff’s Office, the Lubbock Police Department, Lubbock County government, Texas.Arrests.org, or any government agency. All official links have been verified as active at the time of publication (April 2026). An arrest is not a conviction. All persons are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. This is not legal advice. For legal counsel, contact a licensed Texas criminal defense attorney. Texas State Bar Lawyer Referral: 1-800-504-2092. For complaints about jail conditions, contact the Texas Commission on Jail Standards. Last updated: April 2026.

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