Greeneville People Search Guide

Greeneville People Search gives you a clear city trail and a county trail at the same time. The police department at 110 N. Main Street keeps incident, accident, and arrest records. The city court at 200 N. Main Street keeps traffic and ordinance cases. The county courthouse at 101 S. Main Street keeps the longer files, including civil and property records that can explain why a name appears in the city record. If you know the date or the address, you can move through those offices in order and keep the search focused on the right record type.

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Greeneville Quick Facts

110 N. Main Police Records
(423) 638-7111 Police Phone
101 S. Main County Courthouse
(423) 798-1800 Jail Records

Greeneville People Search Records

The Greeneville Police Department at 110 N. Main Street keeps incident reports, accident reports, and arrest records. The Records Division can be reached at (423) 638-7111 ext. 2, and the office is open Monday through Friday from 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM. Requests can be made in person with valid Tennessee identification. That makes it the first city stop when a Greeneville People Search starts with a crash, a call for service, or a booking tied to city limits. The department also notes that some information is available through the website, which helps you narrow the request before you visit the desk.

Accident reports are available to involved parties with proper identification. That matters when the search starts with a wreck instead of a court file. The records desk can tell you whether the report is ready, whether a copy fee applies, and whether you need to show ID. If the arrest moved to Greene County Jail, the sheriff's office at (423) 798-1800 can have the inmate trail that the city report does not keep. Arrestees from city cases are housed there.

The image source below points to the Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security at tn.gov/safety.html. It is a good visual fit when a Greeneville search also needs a driver record or another identity clue that helps confirm the person in the report. The department's public-records rules still matter here because a local request should match the record type and the date range you actually need.

Greeneville People Search Department of Safety record path

That state page does not replace the city report, but it can help match the person, the address, and the local record.

Greeneville People Search and City Court

Greeneville City Court handles traffic citations and city ordinance violations. The court sits at City Hall, 200 N. Main Street, and office hours run Monday through Friday from 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM. The court phone is (423) 638-4243. If your Greeneville People Search starts with a ticket, a warrant, or a payment problem, this is the office that can tell you whether the matter is still open or already closed.

The court page says citations can be paid online, by mail, or in person. It also mentions defensive driving options and warrant information through the clerk. That makes the city court a useful second step when a police report turns into a docket search. The file is brief, but it still points toward the county record that carries the rest of the paper trail. Greeneville also offers a clean local follow-up because the city offices and county courthouse are all downtown.

The image source below points to the Tennessee Virtual Archive at teva.contentdm.oclc.org. That archive is a useful cue when a Greeneville search needs older context or a historical index before the local office can answer. It can be useful when the county courthouse can verify the record but the paper copy is still easier to request through the clerk.

Greeneville People Search virtual archive record trail

Older records can explain a name, a place, or a date before you ask the county office for a copy.

Greene County People Search Sources

The Greene County Circuit Court Clerk keeps civil cases over $25,000, felony criminal cases, divorce proceedings, and appeals. The office is at the Greene County Courthouse, 101 S. Main Street, Greeneville, TN 37743, and the phone is (423) 798-1760. That makes it the county desk when a Greeneville People Search needs the full file rather than the city summary. If you need a docket, a file number, or a copy, this is the office to ask.

The Greene County Clerk handles marriage licenses, vehicle records, business licenses, notary commissions, and other official county records. The office is also at the Greene County Courthouse, 101 S. Main Street, Greeneville, TN 37743, and the phone is (423) 798-1708. That office matters when a search needs a family or property clue instead of a criminal case. A name can show up there because of a wedding, a title transfer, or another routine record that still helps tie the person to the county.

County records fill the gap when the city file is too short. A police report may show a date. A county file may show the broader story behind it. When the local trail is clear, Greeneville is one of the easiest places in East Tennessee to follow it from city hall to the courthouse. The county jail is part of that same trail because city arrestees end up there when the record leaves the police desk.

Note: Greeneville is the county seat, so the city file and the county file often belong in the same search path.

Greeneville People Search and State Records

Tennessee Vital Records at vitalrecords.tn.gov/hc/en-us is the state source for birth, death, marriage, and divorce certificates. If you only need proof that an event happened, the state certificate may be the fastest route. If you need the full court file, the county clerk or circuit court clerk still matters more. The right record depends on what you are trying to prove. For adult criminal history, the TBI TORIS portal is the statewide Tennessee-only route, not the same thing as a local court search.

The Tennessee Court Information portal at tncrtinfo.com can help you compare court type before you call the clerk. The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation TORIS page at tn.gov/tbi/divisions/cjis-division/background-checks.html gives a statewide adult criminal history path. The Office of Open Records Counsel at comptroller.tn.gov/office-functions/open-records-counsel explains how Tennessee requests should be framed and how public access works when the office needs a clearer ask.

T.C.A. § 10-7-503 and T.C.A. § 68-3-205 sit behind this kind of search. One covers public access to records. The other governs vital records. Together they explain why a Greeneville People Search can move from city hall, to the county courthouse, and then to a state certificate without losing the original thread.

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