Lowell 24 Hour Booking

Lowell 24 hour booking records track arrests made by the Lowell Police Department and other law enforcement in the city. These booking logs show who was brought in, what the charge was, and when the arrest took place. Lowell is one of two county seats for Middlesex County. Booking data comes from the Lowell PD records division and the Middlesex County jail system. You can search for recent arrest records through several channels, and the public has a right to this information under Massachusetts law. Getting booking details in Lowell takes a records request to the right office.

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Lowell Overview

115,000 Population
Middlesex County
Yes County Seat
No Online Search

Lowell Booking Records Sources

The main source for 24 hour booking data in Lowell is the Lowell Police Department. Their records division handles all requests for arrest logs and booking sheets. The office is at 50 Arcand Drive in Lowell. You can call the records line at 978-937-3200 and press 4 for the records division. Staff are there Monday through Friday from 8 AM to 4 PM. Walk-in requests work best if you need a copy fast, but they also take mail requests for Lowell booking records.

Department Lowell Police Department, Records Division
Address 50 Arcand Drive
Lowell, MA 01852
Phone 978-937-3200, ext. 4
Hours Monday through Friday, 8:00 AM to 4:00 PM
Website www.lowellma.gov/police

The Middlesex County Sheriff's Office also holds booking records for people sent to the county jail. Their phone number is 978-667-1711. Middlesex County does not have an online inmate search tool, so you must call or write to check on a booking. The sheriff's office maintains its own set of records separate from what Lowell PD keeps. If someone was booked at the city level and then moved to the county facility, both agencies may hold records on that arrest. You can find public records info from the sheriff at www.middlesexsheriff.org.

Lowell Arrest Records and State Law

Massachusetts public records law shapes how Lowell handles booking requests. The law is clear. Most arrest and booking records are public. Under M.G.L. c. 66 § 10, any person can ask for public records from a state or local agency. The Lowell Police Department must make records available unless a specific exemption applies. Juvenile records and certain sealed cases are not public. Everything else in the booking log is fair game.

M.G.L. c. 41 § 98F deals with police logs. This statute says police must keep a daily log of all arrests, and that log is public record. The Lowell PD daily log shows the date, time, location, and charge for each booking. Names of adult suspects are public. This is the core law that makes 24 hour booking records available in Lowell and all other cities in the state. The log must be kept current and can be viewed at the station during regular hours.

If the Lowell Police Department denies your records request, you can appeal to the state Supervisor of Public Records. The appeals process is free. Most denials get overturned if the records are truly public. The whole system is set up to give the public access to booking data in Lowell, and agencies face penalties for not following the rules.

Note: Lowell PD must respond to public records requests within 10 business days under state law.

Lowell District Court and Booking Cases

After someone is booked in Lowell, their case goes to the Lowell District Court. This is where arraignments happen. The court handles misdemeanors and some felony cases that start in the city. Booking records from Lowell PD tie directly to the court docket. If you have a booking date and name, you can often find the matching court case through the Massachusetts court system website.

The Lowell District Court processes a high volume of cases each year. Lowell is the fourth largest city in the state. That means a lot of bookings flow through the system. Court records add detail that a booking sheet alone does not have. The docket shows charges, hearing dates, bail amounts, and case outcomes. Booking records from Lowell tell you when and why someone was arrested. Court records tell you what happened next.

The Middlesex District Attorney handles prosecution for cases that start with a Lowell booking. Their main office is at 15 Commonwealth Avenue in Woburn. The phone is 781-897-8300. The DA decides which charges move forward after Lowell police make the arrest and complete the booking. For serious felonies, cases may move from Lowell District Court up to Middlesex Superior Court in Cambridge or Woburn.

Lowell Booking and CORI Reports

A CORI report is a Criminal Offender Record Information check run through the state. It shows past arrests, charges, and outcomes for a person across all of Massachusetts. If someone was booked in Lowell, that arrest may show up on a CORI report. These reports are not the same as 24 hour booking logs, but they cover the same ground over a longer time frame.

You can request your own CORI through the Massachusetts Department of Criminal Justice Information Services. The process is straightforward. You fill out a form and pay a small fee. The report comes back with all criminal history tied to your name in the state. For Lowell residents who want to see what shows on their record from past bookings, this is the best path. Third parties like employers can also run CORI checks, but they need your consent first.

CORI reports and Lowell booking records serve different needs. A booking log tells you what happened in the last day or week. A CORI check pulls years of data from every city and county. People looking for recent Lowell arrest info should start with the police department. People who need a full criminal history should go the CORI route instead.

Nearby Cities With Booking Records

Lowell sits in the northern part of Middlesex County. Other large cities in the area also keep 24 hour booking records through their own police departments. If you are looking for arrest data from a nearby city, check their local department first. Each city runs its own booking process, and records stay with the arresting agency unless a case moves to county level.

Cambridge is the other county seat for Middlesex County and sits about 25 miles south of Lowell. Cambridge has its own police department and booking process. Framingham is in the western part of Middlesex County. Both cities follow the same state rules on public records that Lowell does. You can make the same type of request to their police departments that you would make to Lowell PD for 24 hour booking records.

Middlesex County Booking Records

Lowell is in Middlesex County, and the county jail system handles people held after booking at the city level. Middlesex is the most populous county in Massachusetts. All booking records from Lowell that lead to county detention go through the Middlesex Sheriff's Office. For more on the county system, booking procedures, and how to search for inmates held at the county level, see the full Middlesex County page.

View Middlesex County 24 Hour Booking

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