Find Warrants in Lee County
Lee County warrant records are kept by the Lee County Sheriff and the Circuit Court Clerk in Jonesville, the county seat. You can find Lee County warrant records by name through the state online case system, by visit at the courthouse, or by call to the sheriff's records desk. Most warrant records become public once a warrant has been served and the file returned to the court. Active arrest warrant content may be held back to keep officers safe and the search on track. The right place to start depends on what you need to look up.
Lee County Warrant Records Overview
Where to Find Lee County Warrant Records
The Lee County Sheriff's Office is the main law enforcement agency that holds and serves active warrants in this far southwest Virginia county. Deputies cover the rural roads, the town of Jonesville, Pennington Gap, St. Charles, and the mountain ridges along the Cumberland Gap. Once a warrant is served and a deputy logs the return, the file goes to the court clerk. The Lee County Circuit Court Clerk holds felony case files at the courthouse in Jonesville. The General District Court Clerk holds the misdemeanor and traffic warrant files in the same complex.
For a name search across Lee County warrant records, the fastest path is the state case system at eapps.courts.state.va.us/gdcourts/. Pick the General District Court for Lee, then run a name lookup. The system shows charges, hearing dates, and case status. For circuit court files, use the circuit court case search. Both tools are free and run by the Office of the Executive Secretary of the Supreme Court of Virginia.
Cases tagged with a capias or a failure to appear charge often link back to a warrant. The portal does not show open arrest warrants by design.
Note: The state case search will not show open arrest warrants in Lee County. Call the sheriff for an active warrant check by phone.
Lee County Sheriff Warrant Lookup
The Lee County Sheriff is the local agency that serves warrants and runs the jail. The records unit can confirm if a name has an active warrant on file. Some Virginia counties post outstanding warrant lists on the sheriff site. Lee does not post a full list, so you should call ahead. Bring photo ID if you plan to ask about your own warrant record at the front desk.
If a person is arrested on a Lee County warrant, deputies bring the person to a magistrate. The magistrate sets bail and issues a commitment order if needed. From there, the case moves to the General District Court or the Circuit Court for a first hearing. Most arrests in Lee County run through the local magistrate first, even when state troopers from the Virginia State Police make the stop.
Under Va. Code § 19.2-76, any sworn officer in Virginia may serve a Lee County warrant anywhere in the state. So a person with a Lee warrant could be picked up in another county and held until Lee can take custody.
Lee Circuit Court Warrant Records
The Lee County Circuit Court Clerk handles felony case files, civil cases over $25,000, and the land record index. The court is part of the 30th Judicial Circuit, which covers the far southwest corner of Virginia. Felony warrants tied to indictments or capias orders move into the circuit court file once the case is bound over from general district court. The clerk's office is in Jonesville at the county courthouse.
You can request copies of Lee Circuit Court warrant records by visit, mail, or fax. Standard copy fees apply. Certified copies cost more. The clerk also keeps the felony case index that you can search in person. The circuit court case search covers most Lee County felony files online.
The General District Court in Lee County handles misdemeanor cases, traffic infractions, and small civil cases. Bench warrants from missed hearings show up often. The court also holds preliminary hearings for felony cases before they go up to circuit court.
How a Lee County Warrant Is Issued
A Lee County warrant starts with a sworn complaint to a magistrate. Under Va. Code § 19.2-71, a magistrate or judge weighs the facts and issues a warrant when there is probable cause. The warrant must name the accused, list the offense, and direct an officer to make the arrest. Va. Code § 19.2-72 sets out what must be in the warrant.
Search warrants follow a separate path. An officer files a sworn affidavit under Va. Code § 19.2-54 that lays out probable cause and the place to be searched. The judge or magistrate signs the warrant. The officer then has 15 days to serve it under Va. Code § 19.2-56. Once served, the inventory and return must be filed with the clerk under Va. Code § 19.2-57.
Statewide Tools for Lee County Warrant Records
The Virginia Judicial System case search at eapps.courts.state.va.us/gdcourts/ is the main free tool for Lee County warrant lookups. You can search by name in the Lee General District Court or browse by hearing date. Felony cases live in the circuit court case search.
The Virginia State Police runs a name-based criminal history check on Form SP-167. The fee is $15 per name. Mail the notarized form to Virginia State Police, Civil & Applicants Records Exchange, P.O. Box 85076, Richmond, VA 23285. Details are on the VSP criminal background check page. Forms are at vsp.virginia.gov/services/forms/.
The case search tool below is the front door for most Lee County warrant lookups. Visit the case search portal to start a name lookup.
The general district court case search is one of the most-used tools for Lee County warrant lookups. Pick the right court from the dropdown, then run a name search to see open and closed cases.
For people in state prison after a Lee County conviction, the Virginia Department of Corrections offender locator shows facility, offense, and projected release date. The Virginia sex offender registry is a free public lookup hosted by the state police.
Federal Warrants Tied to Lee County
Lee County sits in the Western District of Virginia. Federal warrants tied to a Lee County case run through the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Virginia. The Big Stone Gap and Abingdon divisions handle most Lee County federal matters. PACER is the online docket tool for federal cases. The fee is $0.10 per page.
Federal warrants come from a U.S. magistrate judge after a federal complaint or grand jury indictment. The U.S. Marshals Service serves most federal arrest warrants in Virginia.
FOIA and Lee County Warrant Records
The Virginia Freedom of Information Act, found at Va. Code § 2.2-3700 et seq., gives the public the right to see most Lee County warrant records once they are returned to the court. The law has a five-day response rule. Active criminal investigative files get up to 65 working days under Va. Code § 2.2-3706.1.
Public access to court files is also covered by Va. Code § 2.2-3704. The clerk may charge for copies and for staff time on large pulls. You don't have to give a reason for the request.
The Virginia FOIA Advisory Council answers free questions about FOIA practice. Call (804) 698-1810 or email foia@dls.virginia.gov for help.
Are Lee County Warrant Records Public
Yes, in most cases. A Lee County warrant becomes a public record once it has been served and returned to the court. Anyone can ask the clerk for a copy. Some parts of the file may be sealed. Juvenile warrant files have their own privacy rules under Va. Code § 16.1-301. Records that name a confidential informant can also be held back.
The full Code of Virginia is at law.lis.virginia.gov.
Note: Search warrant affidavits in Lee County can be sealed by court order while a case is open and the search is still active.
