Schenectady 72 Hour Booking Lookup

Schenectady 72 hour booking records are created when the Schenectady Police Department processes an arrest at their station on Liberty Street. This city of about 68,000 people sits in the Capital District alongside Albany and Troy. The police department maintains temporary custody logs and cellblock records that track every person brought in. Under state regulations, specifically 9 NYCRR Section 7504.1, police lockups must keep detailed detainee logs. These logs capture identifying information, charges, and safety check notes. Most longer holds get transferred to the Schenectady County jail system.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Schenectady Overview

68,000+ Population
Schenectady County
72 Hours Booking Window
City PD Primary Agency

Schenectady County Handles Jail Bookings

Schenectady County runs the corrections facility that takes inmates from the city and the rest of the county. After the initial arrest and booking at the Schenectady Police station, people who need to stay in custody get moved to the county jail. The Schenectady County Corrections division manages this facility and keeps all booking records on file.

You can reach Schenectady County Corrections at (518) 388-4300. They handle everything from intake to release and maintain records for every person who passes through. The county jail serves the city of Schenectady plus all the towns and villages in the county. If someone was arrested in Schenectady and held more than a few hours, their 72 hour booking record is in the county system.

For the full picture on how Schenectady County processes bookings, see the county page.

View Schenectady County 72 Hour Booking Records

The Schenectady Police Department is based at 531 Liberty Street, Schenectady, NY 12305. Call (518) 382-5200 to reach them. This is where all city arrests begin and where the initial 72 hour booking takes place.

Agency Schenectady Police Department
Address 531 Liberty Street
Schenectady, NY 12305
Phone (518) 382-5200

The records division at the police department keeps temporary custody logs as required by 9 NYCRR Section 7504.1. These cellblock detainee logs include the person's identifying information, charges filed, time of arrival, and safety check notes. The logs are detailed because the state requires police lockups to document everything about a person's time in temporary custody. This regulation exists to protect both the person in custody and the department.

If you need a copy of a 72 hour booking record from a Schenectady arrest, the records division is your first stop. They can confirm whether a specific arrest was processed through their station and guide you on how to get copies of the records.

FOIL Requests for Schenectady Booking Records

Under Public Officers Law Sections 84 through 90, anyone can request 72 hour booking records from the Schenectady Police Department or Schenectady County Corrections. New York's Freedom of Information Law covers all government records, and booking data is no exception.

Write to the records access officer at whichever agency has the records you need. For the initial booking at the city level, contact the Schenectady Police. For county jail records, contact Schenectady County Corrections. Include the person's name, date of arrest, and what you are looking for. The agency gets five business days to respond. More on the process is at the DCJS FOIL page.

Agencies can withhold parts of a record that could harm safety or interfere with an investigation. But the core booking facts are public.

Record Sealing After a Schenectady Arrest

Dismissed cases lead to automatic sealing. If charges from a Schenectady arrest are dropped or the person is acquitted, CPL Section 160.50 kicks in and seals the 72 hour booking record along with all other case records. After sealing, the record does not come up in most background checks.

CPL Section 160.59 allows sealing of certain convictions. You can petition to seal up to two convictions, but violent felonies and sex offenses are off limits. There is a ten-year waiting period from the sentence or release date. If the court grants it, the 72 hour booking record linked to that conviction gets restricted access. Applications go through the New York State Courts system.

Young people may get extra protection. CPL Section 720.35 provides for youthful offender status, which results in all records from the case being sealed. This helps prevent a single arrest from defining someone's future. The 72 hour booking record still exists but is only accessible to certain agencies.

Schenectady County Corrections

The Schenectady County Sheriff's Corrections Division manages the county jail and processes all inmates transferred from the city police lockup.

Schenectady County Sheriff Corrections Division for 72 hour booking records

County corrections staff handle intake, maintain custody records, and process release paperwork. Their records complement the initial 72 hour booking data from the city police department.

Nearby Cities

Schenectady is part of the Capital District. These nearby cities also have 72 hour booking records you can search.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results