Crawford County Jail Inmate List: Arkansas Roster, Bond, Mail & Visiting 2026
This guide explains how to use the official Crawford County Jail inmate list for Van Buren, Arkansas, confirm booking details, review bond information, use JailATM visitation, send money through the official commissary path, understand mail restrictions, and verify related court records before making legal, financial, or travel decisions.
📑 Table of Contents
- 1. Facility Address, Contacts & Official Links
- 2. How to Use the Crawford County Jail Inmate List
- 3. Booking Details, Charges, Mugshots & Record Timing
- 4. Bond Amounts, Legal Sufficiency & Release Procedures
- 5. Phone Calls, JailATM Visitation & Inmate Messaging
- 6. Mail Rules, Commissary, Books & Contraband Limits
- 7. Medical Care, Prescriptions & Property Release
- 8. Visitation Rules, Scheduling & Visitor Conduct
- 9. Arkansas Court Records & Crawford County Case Follow-Up
- 10. Crucial Visitor Tips & Precedents
- 11. Facility Jurisdiction Map
The Crawford County Detention Center is the county jail facility for Crawford County, Arkansas. It is located at 4235 Alma Highway in Van Buren and is operated by the Crawford County Sheriff’s Department. The official detention page states that the facility is operated in accordance with jail standards set by the State of Arkansas and that the Sheriff is responsible for operating a jail facility to house inmates committed by the courts as well as those awaiting trial. The same page states the facility is certified to house 307 inmates.
People searching for “Crawford County jail inmate list” usually need more than a list of names. They need to confirm whether a person is currently in custody, locate the right facility, review the booking number, check bond amount, identify the arresting agency, determine whether there is a no-bond hold, and understand the next practical step for visitation, commissary, mail, or court records. The official Crawford County inmate roster is the starting point, not the final legal record.
The blunt reality is this: stopping at a roster is not enough. The roster can show names, race, sex, and inmate details, including inmate number, booking number, booking date, arresting agency, listed offenses, bond amount, bond type, and agency held for. But a jail record is still an operational custody tool. The court record tells you whether charges were filed, amended, dismissed, resolved, continued, or tied to a warrant, revocation, body attachment, ADC commitment, or other court order. Use the official Sheriff roster first, then use Arkansas court records for case verification.
📍 Jail Address
Facility:
Crawford County Detention Center
Physical Location:
4235 Alma Highway
Van Buren, AR 72956
Use this for: official jail location, map directions, detention-page verification, commissary and visitation orientation, mail-rule review, and facility contact confirmation.
📞 Department Contacts
Detention Phone:
(479) 474-1721
Sheriff’s Department:
479-474-2261
Fax:
479-471-3264
Emergency:
Call 911 only for immediate danger, active threats, medical emergencies, or crimes in progress.
🏢 Sheriff’s Office
Agency:
Crawford County Sheriff’s Department
Sheriff Address:
4235 Alma Highway
Van Buren, AR 72956
Important distinction: A sheriff contact line is not a substitute for court verification, bond confirmation, attorney advice, or official case-document review.
🔎 Roster Snapshot
Official tool:
Crawford County Sheriff inmate list
Roster fields may include:
name, race, sex, inmate number, booking number, booking date, arresting agency, offenses, bond amount, bond type, and agency held for.
Facility capacity:
Certified to house 307 inmates.
I. Statutory Crawford County Jail Inmate List Lookup
To perform a Crawford County Jail inmate list search, start with the official inmate roster maintained by the Crawford County Sheriff’s Department. The search page allows users to enter a last name and first name, then review matching inmate entries. A current roster entry can help confirm whether a person is listed in Crawford County custody and can lead to detailed booking information when the inmate’s name is selected.
Use the person’s legal name first. If no result appears, try spelling variations, middle names, suffixes, maiden names, hyphenated names, and shortened first names. Do not assume that a missing result automatically means the person was released. A recent arrestee may still be in booking, not yet fully entered, temporarily moved for court, held under a different spelling, transferred, released, or connected to another agency’s hold. A person may also be in another county jail, Arkansas Department of Corrections custody, a regional correctional facility, federal custody, or hospital custody.
- Open the official Crawford County Sheriff inmate roster.
- Search by legal last name first, then add first name if needed.
- Click the inmate name to review detailed booking information when available.
- Record the inmate number, booking number, booking date, arresting agency, listed offenses, bond amount, and bond type exactly as displayed.
- Call the Detention Center if the arrest was recent, the name is unclear, or the bond information is confusing.
- Use Arkansas court records or the Crawford County Circuit Clerk for formal case-status verification.
- Confirm custody again before sending commissary funds, scheduling visitation, mailing items, or making legal assumptions.
The official roster is useful because the inmate detail pages can show more than a name. They may show an inmate number, race, sex, height, weight, residence, booking number, booking date, arresting agency, offense list, bond amount, bond type, and agency held for. Those fields help families distinguish between similar names and understand whether the inmate is held for the Crawford County Sheriff’s Office, another agency, ADC-related custody, a court commitment, a parole hold, a body attachment, or another listed reason.
Do not overread the roster. A bond amount shown online does not guarantee release. A $0 bond does not always mean the person is free. A “no bond,” “sentenced,” “legal sufficiency,” “cash,” “hold,” or “agency held for” entry may require court or jail clarification. The roster is a starting point. For final legal status, use the court record and official jail confirmation.
II. Booking Details, Charges, Mugshots & Record Timing
Booking records are created during the jail intake process. After an arrest in Crawford County, the person may be processed through the detention center, reviewed for identity and charge information, searched, medically screened, photographed, assigned a booking number, and held according to court or agency instructions. The official inmate detail pages show that inmate records can include booking dates and arresting agencies, which are important for confirming whether the record is recent or tied to an older custody event.
Timing matters. A person may be arrested before the public roster updates. Another person may remain listed because the system is showing a current custody record, sentenced status, agency hold, or pending commitment. A third-party website may show stale information even after a release. The official roster itself is stronger than a scraped database, but even official data can lag behind court transport, release processing, agency holds, or new paperwork.
Charge labels shown on a jail roster should be treated as booking information, not final court findings. A prosecutor can file different charges from the arrest label. A court can reduce, dismiss, consolidate, continue, or modify charges. An inmate can be held under a body attachment, parole hold, contempt commitment, ADC commitment, or another court order rather than a simple new arrest charge. If you need the actual legal status, use Arkansas court records and the proper clerk’s office.
III. Bond Amounts, Legal Sufficiency & Pre-Trial Release Procedures
Crawford County inmate detail pages may show bond amount and bond type. Examples of bond-type language can include legal sufficiency, no bond, cash-related entries, sentenced entries, or agency-specific holds. These labels are not casual words. They can affect whether a person can be released, whether a court must act first, whether a bonding company can help, or whether the person is being held under a court order or other agency authority.
Before paying money or contacting a bondsman, verify the full picture. Ask whether there is one case or multiple cases. Ask whether the person has a body attachment, parole hold, probation issue, contempt commitment, ADC commitment, regional correctional facility issue, another county hold, warrant, no-bond order, or court-required appearance. A listed bond amount on one offense may not release the person if another hold remains active.
- The inmate is still currently held at Crawford County Detention Center.
- The inmate number and booking number match the person you are searching for.
- Every listed offense has been reviewed, not just the first charge.
- The bond type is clear: cash, legal sufficiency, no bond, sentenced, court hold, agency hold, or other status.
- No parole hold, probation hold, ADC status, body attachment, contempt commitment, or outside agency hold prevents release.
- The correct office, court, or bonding process has been confirmed before payment.
Release after bond is not instant. The jail may still need to verify payment, confirm court paperwork, check warrants, clear agency holds, complete release documentation, return property, and move the inmate through internal processing. If the person has multiple holds, paying one amount may not produce release. The strong move is to ask the jail or court what must be cleared before the person can physically leave custody.
IV. Phone Calls, JailATM Visitation & Inmate Messaging
Inmates generally cannot receive ordinary incoming personal calls in the same way a person receives calls at home. Families, friends, employers, and others may contact the jail for permitted public information, but jail staff do not function as a private message service. Inmate communication usually depends on approved phone systems, kiosk access, video visitation, commissary funding, or vendor-based messaging options.
The official Crawford County Detention page links to inmate visitation through JailATM and commissary through the official payment provider. Because vendor systems and account types can change, start from the official detention page rather than searching the web and clicking the first sponsored result. A visitor or family member should confirm whether the account they are creating is for video visitation, commissary, phone time, messaging, or another purpose. Those categories are not automatically interchangeable.
All non-privileged inmate communications should be treated as monitored, recorded, stored, and potentially reviewable. Do not discuss alleged facts of the case, witnesses, evidence, firearms, drugs, stolen property, vehicles, victim contact, protective orders, co-defendants, hidden property, social media posts, or money movement. Attorney-client communication should be handled through counsel and approved legal channels, not through casual family calls or vendor messaging.
If calls or messages are not working, troubleshoot in order. Confirm the inmate is still in Crawford County custody. Confirm the inmate completed booking. Confirm you used the correct name and booking information. Confirm the right vendor and account type. Confirm the phone number is not blocked. Confirm there are no medical, disciplinary, classification, housing, or court restrictions. Then contact the vendor or jail using the official links and numbers.
V. Strict Mail Regulations, Commissary, Books & Contraband Limits
Crawford County’s official detention page states that mail policies changed effective November 20, 2017 and links to a mail delivery memo. That warning matters because old jail-directory pages may still provide outdated mail instructions. Before sending anything important, verify the current mail procedure directly with the Crawford County Sheriff’s Department or the official detention page.
Mail rules exist to prevent contraband, fraud, drugs, altered paper, hidden objects, coded messages, threats, gang material, unauthorized photos, victim-contact violations, and court-order violations. At a minimum, mail should include the inmate’s full legal name, facility name, facility address, and the sender’s full return name and address. Do not assume that postcards, photos, greeting cards, books, money orders, or legal documents follow the same process.
- Confirm the inmate is still housed at Crawford County Detention Center before mailing.
- Check the current mail memo and facility rule before sending anything beyond a plain letter.
- Use the inmate’s correct legal name and any required identifying information.
- Include the sender’s full name and complete return address.
- Do not include cash, personal checks, loose stamps, stickers, tape, glitter, perfume, lipstick, unknown stains, blank paper, extra envelopes, SIM cards, USB devices, medication, or hidden objects.
- For legal mail, follow legal-mail procedures and clearly identify the attorney/court source when applicable.
- For books or publications, verify current rules before ordering because publisher/direct-ship rules can differ by facility.
Commissary is separate from mail. The official detention page links to an inmate commissary provider. Commissary funds are usually used for approved products, not for bond, court costs, phone time, or every type of jail expense. Funding the wrong account can delay help. Always verify whether the payment is for commissary, visitation, messaging, phone service, bond, court costs, fines, or another category.
Do not mail food, clothing, hygiene products, books, packages, medicine, eyeglasses, or personal property without permission. Even items that feel harmless can become contraband if the jail has not approved them. Unauthorized items may be returned, rejected, destroyed, held, or investigated depending on the policy and circumstances.
VI. Medical Care, Prescriptions & Property Release
Medical care inside Crawford County Detention Center is handled through correctional procedures, not informal family instructions. Families should not arrive with prescription medication and expect staff to accept it automatically. Medication, medical devices, glasses, contacts, and health supplies may require verification, approval, and controlled handling. If there is an urgent medical issue, call the detention center and provide precise information rather than a general emotional request.
Useful medical information includes the inmate’s legal name, date of birth if known, booking number if known, diagnosis, medication name, dosage, prescribing physician, pharmacy, allergies, recent hospitalization, mental-health concern, suicide-risk concern, seizure history, insulin need, pregnancy concern, detox risk, mobility limitation, or recent surgery. Do not exaggerate, but do not minimize risk. Correctional staff need facts they can route through the proper medical channel.
Property release is separate from medical care, commissary, mail, and bond. During booking, inmate property may be inventoried and held according to jail policy. Some property may require inmate authorization before release. Some items may be held as evidence, tied to another agency, restricted by court order, or unavailable until release. Call before sending a family member to retrieve keys, wallet contents, documents, phone, clothing, money, or other property.
Vehicle impound release is another separate process. If a vehicle was towed during the arrest, the jail may not control the release. The arresting agency, tow company, registered owner, lienholder, proof of insurance, driver-license status, court order, or evidence hold may determine next steps. Ask which agency ordered the tow before paying a storage bill or driving to the wrong office.
VII. Visitation Rules, Scheduling & Visitor Conduct
Crawford County’s detention page links to inmate visitation through JailATM. That means visitors should use the official detention page as the route into the visitation system instead of searching for random vendor links. Before scheduling, confirm the inmate is still in custody, confirm the visitor account uses the correct inmate information, and confirm the current visitation process, available time slots, fees, device requirements, and identification rules.
Do not assume that video visitation is casual. Remote or kiosk-based visitation is still a jail communication system. Visits may be monitored, recorded, terminated, or restricted. Visitors should dress conservatively, avoid revealing clothing, avoid gang or drug imagery, keep the screen clear of unauthorized people, and avoid showing weapons, drugs, cash, alcohol, sexual content, or threatening gestures. Do not record, livestream, screenshot, or rebroadcast a visit unless the facility expressly allows it.
- Confirm current custody on the official inmate list before scheduling.
- Use the JailATM visitation link from the official detention page.
- Create the account with accurate inmate and visitor information.
- Have valid photo identification ready if required.
- Test camera, microphone, browser, and internet connection before a remote visit.
- Keep the conversation non-case-related and avoid legal strategy discussions.
- Do not add unauthorized people, record the visit, or display prohibited content.
Visitor denial usually happens because people ignore small rules. Wrong inmate, wrong vendor account, missing ID, late scheduling, poor internet, prohibited clothing, extra people in the room, or case-related conversation can ruin the visit. Treat the visit like a courthouse appointment, not a social video chat.
VIII. Arkansas Court Records & Crawford County Case Follow-Up
After using the Crawford County jail inmate list, verify the criminal case through Arkansas court-record resources. Crawford County’s Circuit Clerk page states that the Circuit Clerk’s Office maintains records for the Criminal Division of Circuit Court and notes that criminal records may be accessed through the Arkansas court case system. Arkansas Judiciary also states that Public CourtConnect is being retired in favor of Search ARCourts for Arkansas court cases.
This distinction is essential. The jail roster tells you custody and booking information. The court record tells you the case number, filings, docket entries, warrants, hearings, orders, dispositions, commitments, revocation activity, and whether charges have changed. A booking offense on the jail roster may not match the final filed charge. A person may be held on a body attachment, contempt commitment, parole hold, ADC status, or another legal basis that is clearer in the court record than in the roster.
If a case does not appear online, do not assume no case exists. It may not yet be filed, may be under a different name spelling, may be restricted, may be pending clerk entry, may be in district court, may be in circuit court, may involve another county, or may require direct clerk assistance. For official copies, certified records, or legal deadlines, use the Circuit Clerk or court directly rather than relying on jail screenshots.
- Write down the booking number, arresting agency, and listed offenses from the inmate roster.
- Search Arkansas court records by party name and case information.
- Check whether the matter is in district court, circuit court, or another jurisdiction.
- Confirm hearing dates, warrants, bond orders, commitments, and disposition through official court records.
- Use a lawyer for strategy, especially for felony charges, revocations, parole holds, no-bond entries, or multiple cases.
IX. Legal Counsel & Visitor Precedents: Crucial Tips
⚠️ Search Details Matter
Do not stop at the name list. Click into the inmate details and record booking number, bond amount, bond type, arresting agency, and agency held for. Those fields tell you what to verify next.
💸 Bond Processing
Before paying anyone, verify whether the inmate has a no-bond hold, body attachment, parole hold, ADC commitment, court commitment, or outside agency hold. One listed amount may not equal release.
👔 Video Visit Discipline
Use the official JailATM link, dress conservatively, keep the visit non-case-related, and do not record or add unauthorized people. Remote visitation is still jail-monitored communication.
📦 Mail & Commissary
Crawford County’s detention page specifically warns that mail policy changed. Verify current mail rules before sending books, photos, cards, money, or anything beyond a plain letter.
X. Facility Jurisdiction Map
The Crawford County Detention Center is located at 4235 Alma Highway in Van Buren, Arkansas. Before driving, confirm whether your need is jail-related, court-related, vendor-related, property-related, or attorney-related. The jail, sheriff administration, commissary provider, visitation vendor, court system, and clerk records are connected but separate.