Wood County Jail Mugshots

Wood County jail mugshots are kept by Sheriff Mark Wasylyshyn's office at the county jail in Bowling Green. The sheriff books people from across Wood County, and that includes arrests made by Bowling Green Police and other local agencies. You can look up who is in the jail right now through the sheriff's site. The county is also home to Bowling Green State University, which means the jail sees a fair share of bookings tied to campus-area incidents. For court case details, the clerk of courts has a search tool that covers criminal and civil filings in the Common Pleas Court.

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Wood County Jail Mugshots Overview

~131K Population
Bowling Green County Seat
6th Circuit Judicial Circuit
1 County Jail Facility

The Wood County Sheriff's Office runs the jail at 1960 E Gypsy Lane Road in Bowling Green, Ohio 43402. Sheriff Mark Wasylyshyn oversees all jail operations. Call the sheriff at 419-354-9001 for questions about who is in custody. The jail books people from every part of the county. That covers arrests by the sheriff's road patrol, Bowling Green Police, Perrysburg Police, Northwood Police, and other local departments. Each booking creates a record that includes the person's mugshot, full name, date of birth, charges, bond amount, and the agency that made the arrest.

The sheriff's office posts an inmate list on its website. You can search by name to find who is in the jail right now. The list shows basic booking info and current charges. This is the fastest way to check if someone was recently arrested in Wood County. The roster gets updated as new bookings come in and as people bond out or get released.

Wood County Jail Mugshots - Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction Offender Search

If you need a copy of a booking photo, you can file a public records request with the sheriff's office. Under ORC 149.43, jail records and mugshots are public records in Ohio. The sheriff has to provide them when asked. There may be a small copy fee. You can call the jail or visit in person to submit your request. Written requests are best because they create a paper trail.

Note: The Wood County jail inmate roster shows current inmates only. For people who have been released, contact the sheriff's office directly or check court records.

Bowling Green Police Records

Bowling Green Police Department is at 175 West Wooster Street in Bowling Green. The records division can be reached at 419-352-1131. This is the main law enforcement agency for the city and handles a large share of arrests in Wood County. People arrested by Bowling Green officers get booked into the Wood County Jail. The police department keeps its own records of arrests, incident reports, and accident reports.

Bowling Green is a college town. BGSU brings roughly 15,000 students to the area, and that affects the types of calls the police handle. Alcohol-related offenses, noise complaints, and minor drug charges tend to spike when school is in session. The campus itself has its own police department, but arrests that lead to criminal charges usually end up going through the county court system. Mugshots from those bookings are held at the county jail.

You can get copies of police reports by calling the records division or going to the station in person. Accident reports cost four dollars each. Other reports are charged at five cents per page. The department follows the same public records rules as every other Ohio agency.

Wood County Court Records and Case Search

Clerk of Courts Rachel L. Schaller runs the court records office at 1 Court House Square in Bowling Green. The phone number is 419-354-9180, and the fax is 419-354-9250. The clerk's office handles all filings for the Wood County Common Pleas Court, which covers felony criminal cases, civil disputes, and domestic relations matters. You can search court records online through the clerk's website to find case details, docket entries, and hearing dates.

The online case search tool is free. It covers criminal and civil cases going back several years. Each case entry shows the parties involved, the charges or claims, key dates, and the judge assigned to the case. This system is useful if you want to check the status of a criminal case that started with an arrest and booking at the Wood County Jail. The case number from the court system links back to the booking record.

Wood County Jail Mugshots - Ohio Revised Code Public Records Law

Bowling Green Municipal Court handles misdemeanor cases, traffic tickets, and small claims for the city and some surrounding townships. If someone was arrested for a low-level offense in Bowling Green, the case will likely be in the municipal court system rather than the Common Pleas Court. The municipal court also has an online search tool.

Note: Felony cases go through Common Pleas Court, while misdemeanors and traffic offenses are handled in Bowling Green Municipal Court. Check both systems for a full picture.

Statewide Resources for Wood County Records

If the person you are looking for has been sent to state prison, they will no longer show up in the Wood County jail roster. The Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction runs an offender search that covers everyone in the state prison system. You can search by name or inmate number. The results show the person's photo, current facility, conviction details, and projected release date.

The VINE notification system lets you sign up for alerts when an inmate's custody status changes. This works for the Wood County Jail and for state prisons. You get a call, text, or email when the person is released, transferred, or escapes. It is free to use. Registration takes just a few minutes.

For traffic-related arrests, the Ohio crash reports portal lets you look up accident reports from across the state. If someone in Wood County was arrested after a traffic crash, the crash report will have details about what happened, who was involved, and whether charges were filed. Reports cost a few dollars to download.

Sealing Wood County Jail Records

Ohio allows some people to seal their criminal records under ORC 2953.32. Sealing means the record gets treated as if it never happened for most purposes. The person can legally say they were not arrested or convicted when asked. Not every crime qualifies. Violent felonies, sex offenses, and first-degree felonies cannot be sealed. For misdemeanors, the wait is one year after the case ends. For felonies, it is three years. The filing fee is $50.

If a Wood County jail mugshot is tied to a case that gets sealed, the booking photo should be removed from public systems. You may need to follow up with the sheriff's office and the clerk of courts to make sure it comes down from their websites. Sealed records can still be seen by law enforcement and some licensing boards, but the general public loses access to them.

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Nearby Counties

Wood County sits in northwest Ohio and borders several other counties. Each one has its own sheriff and jail system with separate inmate records and mugshot databases.