Lewisburg People Search Guide

Lewisburg People Search is a city and county trail at the same time. The police department at 116 W. Commerce Street can show an incident, an accident, or an arrest. City court at 131 E. Commerce Street can show a traffic citation or ordinance case. Marshall County offices at 1101 Archer Avenue then add the longer courthouse trail, including civil cases, divorce records, marriage licenses, and county clerk papers. When you need a search that starts local but does not stop there, Lewisburg gives you both the city file and the county file in one path.

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Lewisburg Quick Facts

116 W. Commerce St Police Department
131 E. Commerce St City Court
1101 Archer Ave County Courthouse
8:00-4:30 Office Hours

Lewisburg People Search Records

The Lewisburg Police Department at lewisburgtn.com/departments/police-department is the first stop for incident reports, accident reports, and arrest records. The office is at 116 W. Commerce Street, the non-emergency number is (931) 359-4044, and records run through extension 2. Records requests can be made in person with valid Tennessee identification, and records hours run Monday through Friday from 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM. That gives a Lewisburg People Search a direct way to start with the report before moving to the court or county file.

The department says accident reports are available to involved parties with proper identification. That matters when a search begins with a crash instead of a court date. A simple report request can give you the date, the location, and the report number you need to keep going. If the person was booked after the arrest, the Marshall County Sheriff's Office at (931) 359-6122 is the inmate-records stop for the jail side of the trail.

The police office can also help when you only know the street address or the day something happened. That small detail can be enough to locate the right record and avoid a broader, slower search.

Lewisburg People Search city court records

The image is tied to the city court source, but the same local record trail often starts with police and ends in court.

Lewisburg People Search and City Court

The Lewisburg City Court at lewisburgtn.com/departments/city-court handles traffic citations and city ordinance violations. The court sits at City Hall, 131 E. Commerce Street, the phone number is (931) 359-1544, and the office is open Monday through Friday from 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM. Citations can be paid online, by mail, or in person, and the court clerk can answer warrant questions and docket questions too.

That makes the court record a key part of a Lewisburg People Search. A citation can turn into a hearing. A hearing can turn into a payment or warrant note. The court file tells you what happened after the police event, which is why it is often the next desk to check.

If the person search started with a city stop, the court record often gives you the next public fact. It may show a case number, a fine, or a later status that the police record does not carry.

Lewisburg People Search public court records source

The state court portal is a good backup when the city docket points into Marshall County or a statewide case type search.

Marshall County People Search Sources

The Marshall County Circuit Court Clerk at marshallcountytn.com/circuit-court-clerk maintains civil cases, felony criminal cases, divorce proceedings, and appeals. The office is in the Marshall County Courthouse at 1101 Archer Avenue in Lewisburg, with the clerk line listed as (931) 359-1038 and office hours from 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM. That makes it the county desk that picks up after the city court or city police file when a search needs more depth.

The Marshall County Clerk at marshallcountytn.com/county-clerk handles marriage licenses, vehicle registrations, notary commissions, and other official records. The office is also at 1101 Archer Avenue, with the county clerk line listed as (931) 359-1072. That office is useful when a Lewisburg People Search needs a marriage trail or a county record that helps confirm a name change. County clerk papers often add the link that a city file cannot hold.

When you read the city and county records together, the trail becomes much easier to follow. A police report can start the chain. A city court docket can confirm the citation. A county clerk or circuit clerk file can finish the picture. In a Lewisburg People Search, those three records are often enough to show whether the name belongs in a city-only file or in a county case as well.

Lewisburg People Search Tennessee State Library and Archives source

The archives image is useful here because older county papers can move into state storage and still matter for a later search.

Public Records and Search Paths

The Tennessee Public Records Act still shapes the request. The city and county offices do not release records by chance. They do so because the law starts from a presumption of openness. In a Lewisburg People Search, that means the key question is not whether records exist. It is which office owns the file and what detail will get the clerk to the right one. A date, address, citation number, or report number usually does more for the request than a broad name search.

That is why a date, address, report number, or docket date matters. It narrows the ask. It also helps the office tell you whether the record is ready, archived, or held by another desk.

Note: Lewisburg requests work best when you identify the city office first, then move to Marshall County if the case needs more depth.

Tennessee People Search in Lewisburg

The state code at T.C.A. ยง 10-7-503 is the legal anchor behind public access. It is a useful reference, but the local office still owns the copy. For that reason, the best Lewisburg People Search path is police first, city court second, then the Marshall County courthouse if the file needs more detail.

For the broader county record, the Marshall County Circuit Court Clerk and the Marshall County Clerk are the better next stops once the city trail points into the courthouse. If the file is older, the Tennessee State Library and Archives can be the last stop when the active courthouse copy is gone.

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