Scott County Inmate Population Overview
The official Scott County inmate population is centered on one local detention site: the Scott County Law Enforcement Center Jail. The jail is part of a shared law-enforcement building used by the Scott County Sheriff's Office and the Scott City Police Department. It holds local pretrial detainees, people booked by county or city officers, short local sentences when held in county custody, and local holds while another agency or court decides what happens next.
Scott County does not publish a live jail population dashboard or a public online roster in the official sources reviewed. That changes how the Scott County inmate population has to be checked. The useful local facts are capacity, staffing, the jail contact line, and the Kansas open-records route. A current head count, average daily population, annual bookings, charge mix, sex breakdown, and multi-year county trend table were not located in the official county materials.
Scott County Inmate Population Statistics
The local capacity sources do not match exactly, so both should be read with attribution. The official Scott County Law Enforcement Center page says the building includes a jail facility for 24 inmates. The Kansas Sheriffs' Association Scott County directory lists jail size as 23, sworn staff as 5, jail staff as 5, and daily board as $40.00. No official current population count was published with those figures.
| Measure | Figure | Source / Context |
|---|---|---|
| Jail capacity | 24 inmates | Scott County Law Enforcement page, accessed June 2026 |
| Jail size | 23 | Kansas Sheriffs' Association directory, accessed June 2026 |
| Daily board | $40.00 | Kansas Sheriffs' Association directory |
| Sworn staff | 5 | Kansas Sheriffs' Association directory |
| Jail staff | 5 | Kansas Sheriffs' Association directory |
| Current jail population | Not published | No official public roster or jail dashboard located |
| Annual bookings | Not published | No county jail annual report located |
The county demographics page gives local population context, including older Census quick facts, but it does not report inmate demographics. It should not be treated as a jail-population source.
Scott County Inmate Population Trends
Scott County's public pages do not provide year-by-year jail population trends. The safest local trend statement is narrow: official sources reviewed show a compact jail, a published capacity range of 23 to 24 beds, and no online roster or public daily population feed. The research did not locate a recent jail expansion notice, consent decree, overcrowding order, death-in-custody notice, or county jail litigation announcement.
| Year | ADP / Year-End Population | Local Note |
|---|---|---|
| 2026 | Not published | No official Scott County jail dashboard located |
| 2025 | Not published | KDOC publications do not replace county jail ADP |
| 2024 | Not published | No county annual jail report located |
State and national sources can add context, but not a Scott County count. The Bureau of Justice Statistics reports national jail figures for the 12 months ending June 30, 2023, and Vera's Kansas fact sheet reports statewide jail trends through 2015. Those sources help explain Kansas and national detention patterns. They do not say how many people are in the Scott County jail today.
Scott County Jail Capacity and Law
Capacity matters because the Scott County inmate population is housed in a small local jail. The county page describes a shared public-safety building with county and city office space, dispatch, a jail, and a public meeting or training room. A few people booked close together can make a small jail feel full even when a larger county would absorb the same number without visible strain. No official source located published a current overcrowding finding.
Key Kansas records and jail statutes:
K.S.A. 45-216 states Kansas policy that public records are open for inspection unless another law closes them.
K.S.A. 45-220 requires public agencies to adopt procedures for requesting and obtaining public records.
K.S.A. 45-221 lists records an agency is not required to disclose, including some criminal investigation records.
K.S.A. 19-1903 assigns the sheriff responsibility for keeping the jail and addresses meals, sex separation, and medical care.
The Kansas Attorney General's KORA FAQ is especially useful for inmate-population access because it says jail inmate roster reports and police blotters are open to the public and are not criminal investigation records. That does not create an online roster for Scott County, but it supports asking for roster or jail-log information through the correct custodian.
Who Counts in Scott County Custody
The Scott County inmate population in the local jail is not the same as all people with Scott County criminal cases. A person can be booked locally and released before a court case appears. Another person can be sentenced and transferred to the Kansas Department of Corrections. A federal prisoner or immigration detainee can have a Scott County connection but appear only in a federal or ICE system.
- Pretrial detainee
- A person held after arrest while a case, bond, or first appearance is pending.
- Sentenced inmate
- A person serving a sentence. Longer felony sentences usually move into KDOC custody.
- Detainer
- A hold or notice from another agency that can delay release even when local bond exists.
- KASPER
- The Kansas Adult Supervised Population Electronic Repository, used for KDOC-supervised people.
Where Scott County Holds Detainees
The local jail is tied closely to Scott City's public-safety routing. The county says the Law Enforcement Center sits on west Highway 96 and serves both the sheriff's office and Scott City Police Department. That matters for records. Dispatch, sheriff records, police arrest reports, and jail inquiries are linked to the same public-safety complex, while formal court charges are handled at the courthouse.
The official Law Enforcement Center page shows the jail contact information and capacity note.
The screenshot confirms the county source used for the jail address, staff routing, and the 24-inmate facility statement, which is why the capacity table keeps that source separate from the sheriff-directory figure.
How to Search Scott County Inmates
No official Scott County online jail roster, booking report, inmate search portal, or mugshot gallery was located in the research. A Scott County inmate population search therefore starts with the jail information line and then branches by custody type. This fallback chain is more useful than a stale web result because many search results for "Scott County jail roster" point to Scott County pages in other states.
- Call the Scott County Law Enforcement Center at 620-872-2133 and ask whether the person is currently held in the local jail.
- If the booking is recent, ask whether processing is complete, whether bond has been set, and whether a first court appearance is pending.
- If staff cannot release the record by phone, ask how to request the jail log, booking record, arrest report, or booking photo under Kansas open-records procedures.
- Search Kansas CaseSearch for filed district court charges once the prosecutor or court opens the case.
- Use KASPER, BOP, or ICE ODLS when the person is no longer a local county-jail detainee.
Scott County KASPER Search Fields
KASPER is not a Scott County jail roster. It is the KDOC locator for persons and cases associated with KDOC-funded or KDOC-operated programs. For Scott County users, it becomes relevant after sentencing, parole, community corrections, absconder status, or other KDOC supervision. The KASPER disclaimer and search entry says records are updated each working day and should not be used as the sole basis for an arrest.
| Field Label | Type | Required | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Show Photos | Radio | No | Yes or No, with No as the default |
| Display Thumbnail Photos | Radio | No | Optional photo display setting |
| Last Name | Text | One or more fields | Use with first name when possible |
| First Name | Text | No | Free-text name field |
| KDOC Number | Text | No | Useful when known from a prior record |
| Conviction County | Dropdown | No | Choose Scott when looking for a Scott County conviction |
| Supervision Type | Dropdown | No | Includes inmate, parole, absconder, discharged, and related categories |
What Scott County Inmate Records Show
Because Scott County does not appear to publish an online jail roster, no county sample profile was available to inspect. Locally requestable records are tied to the county's own categories: jail log or roster information, arrest reports, offense reports, accident reports, motor-vehicle records, VIN inspections, and background-check-related records. Do not assume the public can see housing units, booking numbers, per-charge bond fields, or online mugshots unless the jail confirms them.
| Record Type | What It May Show |
|---|---|
| Jail log or roster | Basic current custody information when releasable under Kansas law |
| Booking record | Identity, booking event, arresting agency, and charge information if released |
| Arrest report | Basic arrest information or report content, subject to investigation limits |
| KASPER profile | KDOC supervision type, facility, county fields, and optional state corrections photos |
| BOP locator result | Federal register number, age, race, sex, release date, and location |
County Jail vs State Prison
The most common search error is using the wrong system. The Scott County jail handles local detention. KDOC handles state-prison and state-supervision records. The federal Bureau of Prisons covers sentenced federal inmates, while ICE ODLS covers some immigration custody. Court records after arrest are a different lane again, because the court file tracks charges, hearings, orders, and dispositions.
| Custody System | Use It For | Primary Source |
|---|---|---|
| Scott County jail | Current local custody, booking, bond, jail-log questions | Law Enforcement Center phone or records request |
| KDOC KASPER | Sentenced prisoners, parole, absconders, community corrections | Kansas Department of Corrections |
| BOP locator | Sentenced federal inmates from 1982 to present | Federal Bureau of Prisons |
| ICE ODLS | Immigration detainee searches | ICE Online Detainee Locator System |
| Kansas CaseSearch | District court cases after charges are filed | Kansas Judicial Branch |
Scott County Detention Facilities
The Facility Map resolves to one local detention facility for Scott County. No separate Scott City municipal jail, regional jail, work-release center, KDOC prison, BOP prison, ICE detention center, or U.S. Marshals detention facility was located in official sources for the county.
- Scott County Law Enforcement Center Jail - the local county jail for Scott County bookings, local pretrial custody, short local sentences, and holds pending transfer.
Scott County court and prosecution offices are nearby but separate. The jail can answer custody questions. The district court and Kansas CaseSearch handle filed charges. The county attorney is associated with prosecuting state criminal cases after arrest.
Scott County Inmate Population FAQ
How big is the Scott County inmate population?
A current public head count was not published in the official sources reviewed. The county says the Law Enforcement Center has a jail facility for 24 inmates, while the Kansas Sheriffs' Association lists jail size as 23.
How do I search the Scott County inmate population?
Start with the Law Enforcement Center at 620-872-2133 because no official online Scott County jail roster was found. If local custody is not confirmed, use CaseSearch, KASPER, BOP, ICE ODLS, or VINELink depending on the custody type.
Are Scott County jail rosters public?
Kansas public-access guidance is favorable to basic roster access. The Kansas Attorney General KORA FAQ says jail inmate roster reports and police blotters are open to the public, though some criminal investigation records and protected records can be withheld.
Does KASPER show Scott County jail inmates?
Usually no. KASPER is for KDOC-supervised people and cases. It is useful when a Scott County defendant has moved into state prison, parole, community corrections, or another state-supervision category.