Johnson County DUI Records

Johnson County DUI records are usually found by starting at the clerk office in Mountain City, then checking the General Sessions docket and the sheriff booking record. The county is small enough that a focused search works better than a broad one. If you know the driver’s name and the year, that is often enough to get a useful response. Johnson County also gives you the basic public access tools you need, but the county office still matters most for paper files and certified copies. The trick is to match the right court to the right charge from the start.

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Johnson County Quick Facts

Mountain City County Seat
Melissa Hollaway Circuit Clerk
DUI Citations General Sessions
Sheriff Arrest Reports

Where to Find Johnson County DUI Records

The Johnson County Circuit Court Clerk is the main source for Johnson County DUI records. The office is at 222 West Main Street in Mountain City and keeps records for Circuit Court and General Sessions Court. That means it has the docket trail for misdemeanors, felony matters, and traffic related filings. The clerk also handles certified copies, public requests, and the court record side of the search. For many people, that is the cleanest place to start because it gives you the charge, the hearing dates, and the case result in one place.

General Sessions Court handles misdemeanor DUI matters and the first court steps on felony cases. The sheriff office keeps booking records and incident reports, which can help you connect the arrest to the court file. Tennessee public records law still controls access, so the county may redact sensitive details or withhold sealed records. If you want a quick screen before you call Mountain City, use the statewide court portals and the Tennessee court website to narrow the party name or case number first.

The page uses the Tennessee Highway Safety Office image from tntrafficsafety.org because Johnson County DUI records often tie back to local enforcement and statewide impaired driving data.

Johnson County DUI Records search using Tennessee Highway Safety Office

That view is a good reminder that county DUI records sit inside a larger enforcement system. The county file is still the record you want for the case itself.

Office Johnson County Circuit Court Clerk
Address 222 West Main St., Mountain City, TN 37683
Phone (423) 727-9012
Email ccclerk@johnsoncountytn.gov

Johnson County DUI Records Search Steps

The first step is simple. Give the clerk the full name, the year, and the kind of record you need. If you want a certified copy, say that up front. The office can search the docket and tell you whether the case is open or closed. Because Johnson County is smaller, the staff may be able to point you to the correct court quickly, which helps if the DUI started as a misdemeanor and later moved into another court.

For arrest details, check the Johnson County Sheriff's Office. It keeps booking records, incident reports, and DUI arrest information. That file can show the stop, the arrest time, and the agency involved. If the driver was booked before court, the sheriff record often gives you the exact date you need to find the docket. The county general sessions office can also help with traffic and misdemeanor hearing dates, which is useful when you only know the rough month of the offense.

  • Driver's full legal name
  • Year or month of the arrest
  • Case number, if available
  • Whether you need a copy or a status check

Johnson County DUI Records and Arrest Files

Johnson County DUI records often split between the court file and the jail or booking record. The court file tells you what happened in court. The arrest record tells you how the case started. Together they give you a better read on the case than either one alone. The sheriff office works under the Tennessee Public Records Act and can sometimes release incident reports, crash records, and booking details that the clerk file does not cover.

General Sessions Court handles DUI citations and the early hearing stage for felony matters. Court costs may include DUI Treatment Fines, and that can help you confirm the file you found. If the matter went up to Circuit Court, the clerk still keeps the record trail. If the record later became sealed or expunged, the public file may be limited. That is normal, and it is why the county clerk and sheriff office should be checked together. In Johnson County, that two-office approach is usually the fastest way to get the full story.

State-level tools can help if the county record leaves holes. The Tennessee courts site, the statewide portal, and the TBI background check page can all confirm names, dates, and later filings.

Fees and Access in Johnson County

Johnson County copy fees vary by office and by how long the file is. Certified copies cost more than plain copies. The clerk can tell you the price before you order, and the sheriff office can explain any charge for incident reports. If you only need a quick search, use the state portal first. That keeps you from paying for the wrong packet. If you are also dealing with a license issue, the Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security controls reinstatement, not the county court.

The TBI background check service is another separate tool. It is useful when you need statewide criminal history, but it is not a substitute for the Johnson County court file. The county file is still the best source for the actual DUI case. Use the state tools as a backup when you need to fill in gaps or confirm a later move through the court system.

Note: Records tied to juvenile matters, sealed orders, or expunged cases may not appear in a public search even if the county office once had them.

Public Access to Johnson County DUI Records

Johnson County DUI records are public unless another law restricts the file. The public records statute opens most county records to inspection, and the clerk can redact sensitive details. That means you can usually see the docket, the final order, and much of the hearing trail. You may not get every line, though. Juvenile information, personal identifiers, and sealed material can stay out of the copy.

If the DUI involved implied consent issues, a refusal, or a license hold, the county file may point you back to the state driver services office. That is where the reinstatement rules live. For general crash and enforcement data, the Highway Safety Office is the better state source. Together, those links help you read a Johnson County DUI record in context instead of treating it like a stand-alone paper file.

Start local, then move to the state only if the county record is not enough.

More Tennessee DUI Records Help

If you need a wider search, the state tools can help you finish the job. Tennessee courts, the public case portal, the TBI, and the reinstatement office all support different parts of a DUI record search. That is useful in Johnson County because a simple court docket may not explain the whole history. Use the county file for the core facts, then check the state sources only when you need confirmation or a second record trail.

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