Franklin County DUI Records

Franklin County DUI records are kept through the Circuit Court Clerk in Winchester, and the county research gives the office a very complete public-record setup. The clerk handles records for Circuit Court, General Sessions Court, and Juvenile Court, and the office also offers online access and public terminals. That makes Franklin County a strong county for people who want to search a DUI case in one place, then move straight to copies or follow-up questions if needed. The sheriff's office also keeps related arrest records and booking logs.

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Franklin County Quick Facts

Winchester County Seat
Public Terminals Access Method
Sheriff Arrest Records
Circuit Court Records

Franklin County DUI Records Search

The Franklin County Circuit Court Clerk is the best starting point for DUI records in the county. The research says the office is at 440 George Fraley Parkway, Room 157, Winchester, TN 37398, with phone and email contact listed for direct inquiries. It also says online access and public access terminals are available, which is a real advantage when you want to search before you visit. That means Franklin County gives you both a courthouse path and an online path for the same kind of case work.

A good search starts with the name and the date. If you know the court division, even better. Franklin County handles Circuit, General Sessions, and Juvenile Court records through the same clerk office, so DUI work can turn up in more than one docket. If you need a certified copy, the clerk can tell you what the office wants. If you need to confirm an arrest first, the sheriff's office keeps booking logs and incident reports that can support the court record search.

  • Full legal name
  • Approximate arrest or filing date
  • Court division or docket
  • Case number, if available

Where to Find Franklin County DUI Records

The Franklin County Circuit Court Clerk page is the county's main records source, and the sheriff's office page gives you the arrest side of the story. The research says the clerk office keeps dockets, costs, taxes, and expungement requests, while the sheriff's office keeps arrest records, booking logs, and incident reports. That pairing is useful when you need to follow a DUI from arrest to court.

The county clerk site at franklincountycircuitcourtclerk.org is the office page, and the sheriff's office page at franklincountytn.gov/sheriffs-office is the arrest-record source. If you need a higher-court record trail, the Tennessee public case history page at tncourts.gov/courts/supreme-court/public-case-history is the next step. The county research also says the courthouse security checkpoint requires valid ID, so plan for that if you visit in person.

Franklin County is one of the cleaner counties for DUI research because the office structure is clear. The clerk keeps the case, the sheriff keeps the arrest trail, and the public terminals help bridge the gap if you are not sure where to start.

The county clerk page at franklincountycircuitcourtclerk.org is the office source, and the sheriff page at franklincountytn.gov/sheriffs-office gives the related arrest records path.

The Tennessee Courts homepage at tncourts.gov is the state source behind this image and a good fallback when the county file needs a broader court check.

Franklin County DUI Records and Tennessee courts homepage

That state courts homepage is a good fallback when the county file needs a broader context. It does not replace the clerk, but it helps keep the search on track.

What Franklin County DUI Records Show

Franklin County DUI records can show the filing date, the hearing schedule, the disposition, and the court costs tied to the case. Because the county clerk handles multiple court levels, the record may also show whether the matter stayed in General Sessions or moved into Circuit Court. That is especially useful when you are tracing a misdemeanor DUI that later became a more serious case.

The county research also says the office processes expungement requests per court orders. That means a DUI record may later be limited, sealed, or changed in the public file. If you need a record for another agency, ask for the exact copy type and make sure the case is still open in public form before you leave the office.

  • Charge and court level
  • Hearing date and docket note
  • Disposition or expungement status
  • Cost or fine reference
  • Certified copy status

Franklin County DUI Records Access and Rules

The Tennessee Public Records Act, T.C.A. § 10-7-503, is the starting point, but Franklin County still follows the normal court limits for restricted files. The county research says the office has public access terminals and that the courthouse requires valid ID for entry. That makes it a county where the process is open, but not casual. A clear request works better than a broad one.

If you need statewide help, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation background check page at tn.gov/tbi/divisions/cjisdivision/background-checks.html can support a broader criminal history check, and the Department of Safety reinstatement page at tn.gov/safety/driver-services/reinstatements.html is the right state follow-up for license issues. The county research also says the clerk coordinates with the district attorney's office on case management, which makes the clerk a strong source for status questions.

Note: If a record has been expunged, the public file may no longer show the full case even if the county once had it on record.

Fees, Copies, and Local Help

Franklin County research says the office collects court costs, fines, and litigation taxes, and that certified copies are available for a fee. That tells you the clerk is the right place to ask before you pay for paper. If you only need a quick status, the online access and public terminals may be enough. If you need a certified copy for a court or agency, ask for that version right away.

The Tennessee Court System at tncourts.gov gives forms and public case tools, while the Office of Open Records Counsel at comptroller.tn.gov/office-functions/open-records-counsel explains the public records process. For DUI trend data, the Tennessee Highway Safety Office at tntrafficsafety.org is the best state source.

Franklin County gives you a very usable mix of clerk, sheriff, and state tools for DUI records work.

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Related Franklin County DUI Records Resources

The county clerk page at franklincountycircuitcourtclerk.org is the office source, and the sheriff page at franklincountytn.gov/sheriffs-office gives the arrest-record side. If the case reaches a higher court, the Tennessee public case history page at tncourts.gov/courts/supreme-court/public-case-history is the next resource to check.

Franklin County works best when you use the clerk for the case and the sheriff for the arrest. That is the cleanest way to track a DUI record here.