Reviewed on: April 13,2026
Inmate Search

How to Find Out the Details of an Inmate's Criminal Case?

How can i get more info on the inmates i follow and details of the crimes they committed

The most accurate and complete source of information about an inmate's charges, case history, and conviction is the official court record.
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Answered by a former federal inmate · 14+ years advising families
✓ Verified answer August 19,2014 · Inmate Search
1

The most accurate and complete source of information about an inmate's charges, case history, and conviction is the official court record. Everything else, whether it is news coverage, online databases, or secondhand accounts, is either incomplete or filtered through someone else's interpretation.

The Clerk of the Court in the jurisdiction where the case was tried is where to start. Call or visit the clerk's office and ask for the case file associated with the person's name and approximate date of arrest or conviction. You will need to pay a fee for copies, which varies by jurisdiction but is typically modest. What you receive is the complete official record, including the charges filed, any plea agreements, the verdict or conviction, sentencing documents, and any appeals.

For federal cases, PACER at pacer.gov is the national database for federal court records. You can search by name and access docket entries, filings, and case documents for a small per-page fee. Federal cases going back many years are accessible through this system.

For recent arrests and criminal history, TruthFinder and similar public records services aggregate information from court records, law enforcement databases, and other public sources. These are useful for a quick overview but should be verified against official court records for anything where accuracy matters.

Sex offenders are searchable through state sex offender registries, which are publicly available through each state's law enforcement or attorney general website.

The court record is always the definitive source. It contains the facts as established through the legal process without editorial, rumor, or omission.

Accepted Answer Date Created: August 19,2014
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About this answer: This response was prepared by InmateAid’s editorial team in consultation with former inmates who have direct experience with the federal correctional system. InmateAid has served families of the incarcerated since 2012. This is general information only — not legal advice. Last reviewed April 2026.