Albany 72 Hour Booking Records

Albany is the capital of New York State and the seat of Albany County. The city has a population of about 99,000 and sits along the Hudson River in the eastern part of the state. When someone is arrested in Albany, the 72 hour booking process involves the Albany Police Department and the Albany County Correctional Facility. The county jail averages around 400 people in custody on any given day and processes roughly 3,500 bookings each year. Most of those come from Albany and the surrounding towns.

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Albany Overview

99,000+ Population
Albany County
~3,500 Annual Bookings
~400 Avg Daily Pop.

Albany County Handles 72 Hour Booking

The Albany County Correctional Facility processes all jail bookings for arrests in Albany and other towns in the county. The facility is operated by the Albany County Sheriff's Office. When Albany Police arrest someone who needs to be held, the person goes to the correctional facility for the formal 72 hour booking process.

During booking, staff fingerprint the person, take a photograph, and enter all charges and personal information into the system. The county must bring the arrested person before a judge within 72 hours. The correctional facility houses both pretrial detainees and sentenced inmates. With roughly 3,500 bookings per year, it is a busy facility that handles cases from across the county.

Sheriff Albany County Sheriff
Sheriff Phone (518) 487-5400
Correctional Facility Albany County Correctional Facility
Facility Phone (518) 869-2600
County Page Albany County 72 Hour Booking

Albany County includes the city of Albany and several other communities like Colonie, Bethlehem, and Guilderland. All of these areas feed into the same county correctional facility for booking purposes.

The Albany Police Department is a city department with several hundred officers. They handle law enforcement within the city limits. The department is headquartered at 165 Henry Johnson Boulevard in Albany.

Address 165 Henry Johnson Boulevard
Albany, NY 12210
Phone (518) 438-4000

Albany Police create arrest reports and incident reports for every arrest they make. These are separate from the 72 hour booking records at the county jail. To get a copy of an arrest report, you file a FOIL request with the Albany Police Department. They maintain their own records system. The booking record at the county facility is a separate document that covers the jail intake process.

Albany has one of the higher crime rates in the capital region. The police department stays busy. They handle thousands of calls for service each year, and a good portion of those lead to arrests that result in county bookings.

FOIL Requests for Albany Booking Records

New York's Freedom of Information Law, Public Officers Law Sections 84 through 90, gives you the right to request government records. You can use FOIL to get 72 hour booking records from the Albany County Sheriff or arrest reports from Albany Police. Both agencies must respond to proper FOIL requests.

Albany Police are used to getting FOIL requests for arrest reports and incident reports. Send your request to their records access officer. Include the person's name, date of birth, and the date or approximate date of the arrest. The agency has five business days to respond. The DCJS FOIL page has guidance on how to write a proper request.

Most booking information is public. Names, charges, bail amounts, and court dates are routinely available. Some information gets withheld for privacy reasons, especially medical details and certain personal identifiers. The agency will tell you what they can and cannot provide.

Record Sealing and Albany Booking Records

Not all 72 hour booking records stay public. New York law provides for sealing in several situations. CPL Section 160.50 requires automatic sealing when a case is dismissed or the person is acquitted. The booking record, arrest report, and mugshot all get sealed. This happens automatically once the case ends.

CPL Section 160.59 allows people with certain convictions to petition for sealing. You file a motion with the court. The judge weighs the offense, your history, and your rehabilitation. If granted, the booking record gets sealed from public access. Law enforcement retains access for their purposes, but the record does not show up on standard background checks after sealing.

Youthful offender records are protected under CPL Section 720.35 for people under 19 who received that status. All records from the case become confidential. Correction Law Section 9 sets the standards for how the Albany County Correctional Facility handles booking records and processes people who come in through the system.

New York State Criminal Justice Services

The Division of Criminal Justice Services provides statewide resources for searching and understanding criminal records in New York, including 72 hour booking data.

New York Division of Criminal Justice Services homepage for accessing booking and criminal records

Visit the DCJS website for information about criminal records, background checks, and how to access booking information across New York State.

Nearby Cities

These cities and towns are near Albany and share regional booking and court systems in the capital district.

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Albany County 72 Hour Booking Records

Albany is the county seat of Albany County. All jail bookings go through the Albany County Correctional Facility. For full details on the county system and how to search booking records, visit the Albany County page.

View Albany County 72 Hour Booking Records