Cumberland County 24 Hour Booking

Cumberland County 24 hour booking records are created by the Cumberland County Sheriff's Office and are available to the public under Virginia law. When someone is arrested in the county, that booking information can be found through the VADOC Inmate Locator, the Virginia courts system, or by calling the Sheriff's Office in Cumberland, Virginia.

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Cumberland County Overview

Cumberland County Seat
Central Virginia (Piedmont) Region
Sheriff's Office Primary Agency
24/7 Booking Services

Find Cumberland County 24 Hour Booking Records

The Cumberland County Sheriff's Office is responsible for all arrests in the county. Booking is a 24-hour process. Each arrest results in a record that includes the person's name, charges, date and time of arrest, fingerprints, and intake photos. Those records are public for adults under Virginia law.

Start with the Virginia Department of Corrections Inmate Locator if you think someone has been moved to state custody. For court case data, the Virginia Courts case information portal and the Circuit Court Online Case Information System let you search by name or case number. Cumberland County cases are handled in the 10th Judicial Circuit, which also covers Prince Edward and Charlotte counties.

Cumberland County participates in the Piedmont Regional Jail for some inmates. If a person is not at the local level, they may have been transferred to that regional facility, which serves several Central Virginia and Southside counties. Call the Sheriff's Office to confirm where someone is being held. That is the fastest way to get current custody status, especially in the first day or two after an arrest when online systems may still be catching up.

Records not found online can be requested by submitting a written FOIA request to the Sheriff's Office. The response is due within five working days. Most adult booking data must be released under state law.

Cumberland County Sheriff's Office

The Cumberland County Sheriff's Office is the only law enforcement agency serving the county. Cumberland has no incorporated towns with their own police departments, so the Sheriff's Office handles everything from traffic stops to serious felony investigations. Deputies patrol around the clock, and the booking process runs 24 hours a day every day of the year.

The office is based in Cumberland, the county seat. It is a small rural agency, but it operates under the same Virginia public records rules as any larger department. Booking records can be accessed by going in person, calling the office, or sending a written FOIA request. Staff can search records by name or booking number. Certified copies of arrest records may have a small copying fee. Mail requests should include the full legal name of the person, the approximate date of arrest, and a return address.

Cumberland County is a quiet Piedmont county that borders Fluvanna, Buckingham, Prince Edward, Amelia, Powhatan, and Goochland counties. The county has no large population centers, and the Sheriff's Office handles a relatively modest volume of arrests compared to more urbanized counties. Still, all standard Virginia booking procedures apply here. The Virginia State Police also patrol the county and may hold records for arrests they make within Cumberland County's borders.

For inmates transferred to the Piedmont Regional Jail, the Sheriff's Office can provide contact details for that facility. Regional jails operate independently under a jail authority and serve multiple member jurisdictions.

Your FOIA Rights in Cumberland County

Virginia's Freedom of Information Act gives anyone the right to access arrest records from law enforcement agencies. The statute that controls this is Virginia Code § 2.2-3706. Under this law, agencies must release the identity of any adult who is arrested and charged, the charges they face, and booking photos taken during intake. This release is mandatory, not voluntary. An agency that refuses to release this information on a standard adult arrest is in violation of state law.

Exceptions apply in certain cases. Records for juveniles are closed. Medical and mental health information stays private. If releasing certain information would harm an active investigation, that portion can be withheld. Confidential source details are also protected. But for the typical adult booking in Cumberland County, the core facts are accessible to any member of the public who submits a request.

Agencies have five working days to respond. If they need more time, they must tell you in writing and have up to seven additional days. If a request is denied without good reason, you can contact the Virginia Freedom of Information Advisory Council for help. They advise the public on FOIA rights and can mediate disputes with agencies that fail to comply.

Any arrest log or booking list that the Cumberland County Sheriff's Office maintains is a public document and must be released when asked.

Arrest and Booking Process in Cumberland County

Virginia's arrest warrant rules are set out in Virginia Code § 19.2-72. A magistrate issues a warrant when a sworn complaint shows probable cause that a crime took place. The warrant names the accused and describes the offense. Virginia uses a statewide magistrate system that operates every hour of every day, which means arrests and bookings in Cumberland County can happen at any time.

After an arrest, the person is taken to jail for booking. The process includes confirming identity, taking fingerprints and photos, completing a medical screening, and logging all charges. After booking, a magistrate decides whether to set bail and at what level. The magistrate looks at the nature of the offense, the person's record, their connections to the community, and any potential flight risk or threat to others. Some people are released on bond. Others are held in custody until their first court appearance.

For less serious offenses, a deputy may issue a summons instead of booking the person into jail. A summons orders the person to appear in court on a specific date without requiring physical detention. This is a common approach for Class 3 and 4 misdemeanors when the officer is satisfied the person will show up. If there is any doubt, the officer can still make a full custodial arrest, even for a minor charge.

After booking, misdemeanor cases go to General District Court and felony cases go to Circuit Court. Both court systems have public records searchable online through Virginia's court case systems.

Cumberland County Court Records and Case Lookup

Criminal cases in Cumberland County move through the state courts after booking. General District Court handles misdemeanors. Circuit Court handles felonies. Court records are separate from booking records. Booking tracks the arrest. Court records follow the case from charge to final judgment.

Look up Cumberland County criminal cases through Virginia's Circuit Court Online Case Information System. Search by name, case number, or hearing date. Use the "CR" prefix for criminal matters. The system covers most Virginia circuit courts and shows charge details, court dates, and current status in real time. Cumberland cases are in the 10th Judicial Circuit.

The Virginia Courts case information portal covers both circuit and district courts. Both tools are free and require no account. For certified copies of court records, contact the Cumberland County Circuit Court Clerk. There may be a fee per page for printed documents.

Misdemeanor and traffic records in General District Court are on a different database than circuit court records. If you are searching for a case and not finding it in the circuit court system, try the district court portal as well. Some cases start in district court and are later moved to circuit court, so it is worth checking both.

Sealing and Expungement of Cumberland County Booking Records

Virginia's record sealing law takes effect July 1, 2026. Under the new rules, approximately 90% of misdemeanors and close to two-thirds of Class 5 and 6 felonies will be eligible for sealing. The Justice Forward Virginia Foundation provides a guide covering who qualifies and what steps are involved, including information useful for Cumberland County residents.

Automatic sealing will cover misdemeanor larceny, concealment, trespass, and disorderly conduct, provided seven years have passed since the conviction and no new convictions have occurred. Marijuana possession charges will be automatically sealed regardless of how the case ended. Petition-based sealing will be available for a broader range of records. After July 1, 2026, no filing fees or fingerprints will be required to file a petition.

Under current Virginia law, a Cumberland County resident can petition the Circuit Court to expunge a record if the case was dismissed or ended in an acquittal. Convictions cannot be expunged under the current rules. They become eligible under the new 2026 sealing law. If you want to start the process now for a dismissed case, the Circuit Court Clerk in Cumberland can provide the forms you need. An attorney with experience in Virginia criminal records law can help you figure out whether your situation qualifies and how to proceed.

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Nearby Counties

Cumberland County sits in Central Virginia's Piedmont, bordered by Fluvanna, Buckingham, Prince Edward, Amelia, Powhatan, and Goochland counties.