Uintah County Inmate Population Search
Uintah County inmate population searches are centered on the Public Safety Complex, where the jail and courts sit close together. That setup makes the county's custody path easier to read than in places where the jail and court are spread across town. It also means a search can move from booking to court services without losing the county thread. Uintah County uses Securus Technologies for communications, and the sheriff office and jail pages keep the contact details close by. If you are trying to find a person, understand the communication platform, or see where the court piece fits, the county pages give you a direct route.
Uintah County Inmate Population Basics
The county site at uintah.gov is the best starting point for a Uintah County inmate population search. The sheriff office page at uintah.gov/residents/sheriff_s_office.php and the jail page at uintah.gov/residents/uintah_county_jail.php are the two main local pages to use when you need custody details. The jail page gives the Public Safety Complex address at 641 E 300 S, Vernal, UT 84078, and the jail phone at (435) 781-1300. That is the county's direct contact path for a live custody question.
Uintah County's setup matters because the jail and courts are co-located in the same public safety complex. That makes the county's inmate population page feel more like a working system than a static list. If you need to know where a person was booked, where court services sit, or which office should answer first, the complex gives you one place to think about. The county pages are built to support that setup. They do not send you wandering between unrelated offices.
The county homepage at uintah.gov is the source for the image below and the best local base for a Uintah County inmate population search because it keeps the sheriff office and jail pages tied to the county itself.
The county homepage image shows the official Uintah County entry point. It is the right local base when the jail and court services share the same complex.
Uintah County Inmate Population And Courts
Uintah County's jail and courts sit together in the Public Safety Complex, and that is the core fact to remember. A person can move from booking into court services without leaving the county's main public safety site. That is important when you are trying to read an inmate population question because the custody side and the court side are physically close. The county does not hide that. It builds the page structure around it.
The sheriff office page gives the law enforcement contact path, while the jail page gives the custody contact path. The jail page uses the same complex address and makes it clear that this is the active detention site. The sheriff office can help with the broader office side, but the jail page is the first stop for a live custody issue. That is useful because it lets you separate a general law enforcement question from a jail question without leaving the county site.
Uintah County also connects the jail to communication tools. The public pages note Securus Technologies and GettingOut as the platform used for inmate communication. That matters because it tells you how the jail expects the public to handle money, calls, or messaging. In a county where the jail and court are in one complex, the communication vendor is part of the same overall system. If you are helping someone inside, that detail is as important as the jail address.
Uintah County's combined layout makes the search more direct. A booking can lead to court services, and the court services can sit in the same county complex. That is the practical value of the page.
Uintah County Inmate Population Records
For records access, Uintah County lines up with the state court system and public records law. The Utah courts main site at utcourts.gov and the district courts page at utcourts.gov/en/courts/district-courts.html help show how the 8th Judicial District fits into the county's court services. That is important because the Public Safety Complex is not just a jail. It is also a place where court services can be read through the state court structure. If a booking turns into a filing or hearing, those pages help you keep the county and court sides straight.
The GRAMA statute at Utah Code Title 63G, Chapter 2 is the legal frame for formal records requests. When a Uintah County inmate population check becomes a document request, GRAMA is the rule set that matters. If you need a report or a file, the county and state steps work together. The jail gives you the custody path, and GRAMA gives you the records path. That split is clean, and it is one of the reasons the county pages are useful.
For state custody backup, the Utah offender search at corrections.utah.gov/offender-search/ is the right current-status check. It is most useful when someone may have moved out of county custody or into a different Utah corrections setting. VINELink at vinelink.com is the alert tool when you need status changes over time. Those tools sit outside the county, but they are a good fit for Uintah because the jail and courts are already so closely linked inside the county system.
The Utah courts site at utcourts.gov is the source for the state image below and the court-side backup for a Uintah County inmate population search.
The Utah State Courts image fits Uintah County because the jail and court services are part of the same public safety complex.
Uintah County Inmate Population State Backups
The county pages already do a lot of the work in Uintah County, but the state backup tools still matter. The offender search at corrections.utah.gov/offender-search/ shows current Utah Department of Corrections jurisdiction only, so it is the best way to confirm that a person is still in local or state custody. If you are following a case across the county line, that check helps you keep the search current. BCI at bci.utah.gov/ is another state resource when the issue becomes identity or criminal history rather than simple custody.
Because the jail and courts are co-located, Uintah County already gives you a strong local map. The state tools just fill the gaps. They matter most when a person has moved, when the county page does not answer the question fully, or when you need a custody alert rather than a one-time search. That is why the county pages and state pages work well together. Each one does a different job.
Note: Uintah County is one of the clearest examples in the site because the jail, court services, and communications tools are all tied to the same public safety complex.
The Utah offender search at corrections.utah.gov/offender-search/ is the best current custody check when the Uintah County jail page is not enough.
Nearby County Links
Uintah County sits in eastern Utah, where a booking may need a second county check. These internal links stay inside the site and point to county pages already built in this repo.
If a person moved, transferred, or was booked across a border, these pages help you compare the next official step.