Anne Arundel County Booking Reports

Anne Arundel County booking reports are filed each time a person is held at one of the county's two detention facilities. These records show who was booked, what charges were filed, and when the arrest took place. The Anne Arundel County Police Department runs both lockups and keeps all booking data on file. You can search for booking reports by name or by Jail Identification Number, which is the ID code the county gives each person at intake. Getting a copy of these records in Anne Arundel County starts with knowing which facility holds the person and what info you need to pull the right file. Most booking reports are public under state law, and the process to get them is not hard once you know where to look.

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Anne Arundel County Overview

588,000+ Population
2 Detention Facilities
1,835 Combined Bed Capacity
$10 MPIA Request Fee

Anne Arundel County Detention Facilities

Anne Arundel County runs two facilities where booking reports are created. The Jennifer Road Detention Center sits in Annapolis and holds up to 635 people. The Ordnance Road Correctional Center is in Glen Burnie with a capacity near 1,200. Both are run by the Anne Arundel County Police Department, not the sheriff. That is a key detail because it means all booking report requests in Anne Arundel County go through the police department, not a separate office.

Each facility handles a different part of the process. JRDC is where most new arrests go first. That is where the initial booking report gets made. Staff log the person's name, date of birth, charges, and bond info. They also take a photo and assign a Jail Identification Number. The JID is tied to all records for that person while they are in custody in Anne Arundel County. If someone gets moved to Ordnance Road later, the JID stays the same. You will need it for many things, from commissary to records requests.

The Anne Arundel County detention facilities portal is the best place to start when looking up booking reports and inmate details. The site lists both facilities with phone numbers and addresses.

Anne Arundel County detention facilities portal for booking reports

From that page you can find links to visitation rules, commissary deposits, and the FAQ section. All of these tie back to booking report data in Anne Arundel County.

Jennifer Road (JRDC) 131 Jennifer Road
Annapolis, MD 21401
Phone: 410-222-7374
Capacity: 635
Ordnance Road (ORCC) 600 East Ordnance Road
Glen Burnie, MD 21060
Phone: 410-222-4900
Capacity: ~1,200
Initial Intake Monday through Friday at 8:30 AM

What Anne Arundel Booking Reports Contain

A booking report from Anne Arundel County lists the basic facts about an arrest and the person who was booked. The record gets made at the time of intake, so it shows what was known right then. Later updates, like charge changes or bond adjustments, may show up on a separate sheet or in the court file. But the original booking report stays as is.

Anne Arundel County booking reports typically include the person's full name, date of birth, and home address at the time of arrest. The report also shows the JID, the facility where the person is held (JRDC or ORCC), and which housing unit they were placed in. Charges are listed along with bond amounts and any hold from other agencies. If the person has been sentenced, the expected release date may appear as well. The booking report also notes the commissary account balance and the visitation schedule assigned to that person in Anne Arundel County.

These records are public under General Provisions § 4-201, which says government records are open to the public unless a specific law says otherwise. Some parts of a booking report may be held back if they involve a juvenile or if release would risk someone's safety. But most booking reports in Anne Arundel County are available in full.

Visitation at Anne Arundel County Facilities

Visiting someone who has been booked in Anne Arundel County works a bit differently at each facility. JRDC allows two personal visits per week. Each visit can last up to one hour, though staff may cut it to 30 minutes if there is high demand that day. You need to check in at least 30 minutes before the session ends. ORCC allows three visits per week but each one is only 30 minutes long. Up to three people can visit at the same time at ORCC.

The Anne Arundel County inmate visitation page has the full schedule and rules for both JRDC and ORCC.

Anne Arundel County inmate visitation rules and booking reports

You must bring a valid form of ID to visit. The county accepts an unexpired driver's license, a government-issued ID card, or a passport. If you use a passport, you also need proof of your current address like a phone bill or utility bill. No one gets in without proper ID. This rule is the same at both Anne Arundel County facilities.

  • JRDC: 2 visits per week, up to 1 hour each
  • ORCC: 3 visits per week, 30 minutes each
  • ORCC: up to 3 visitors at one time
  • Attorney visits at JRDC: 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
  • Valid ID required at both facilities

Anne Arundel County Commissary and Phone

The commissary system for both Anne Arundel County facilities runs through Access Corrections. You can put funds on an inmate's account online at accesscorrections.com, by phone at 866-345-1884, through the kiosk in the lobby, or with the mobile app. You will need the person's JID or full name to make a deposit. There is a $200 cap on the account balance. Money orders are not accepted in Anne Arundel County.

The Anne Arundel County commissary deposits page explains all the methods and deadlines for getting funds to someone who has been booked.

Anne Arundel County commissary deposit options for booked inmates

Deposits must clear by midnight on Wednesday for the next Thursday order. If you miss that window, the funds will sit until the following week. People with no money on their account can get a personal hygiene kit once a week through the indigent provisions program. They also have the option of socks, a t-shirt, or underwear instead. Anne Arundel County deducts postage, copier fees, and medical costs from the account as they come up.

Phone calls at both Anne Arundel County facilities go through IC Solutions. You can reach their support line at 1-888-506-8407. Phones are open from 7:00 AM to midnight Sunday through Thursday, and 7:00 AM to 1:00 AM on Friday and Saturday. Each call is capped at 20 minutes. Rates are per minute and vary by call type.

Sending Mail to Anne Arundel Inmates

You can send letters to someone booked in Anne Arundel County at either facility. All mail must have a return address or it gets sent back. Use the person's full name and their ID number on the envelope. The addresses are different for each location, so make sure you send it to the right one.

For JRDC, address mail to: Jennifer Road Detention Center, Attn: [Name and ID], 131 Jennifer Road, Annapolis, MD 21401. For ORCC, address mail to: Ordnance Road Correctional Center, Attn: [Name and ID], 600 E. Ordnance Road, Glen Burnie, MD 21060. Only mail from known postal carriers is accepted at ORCC. Both facilities check all incoming mail, so don't send items that aren't allowed.

The Anne Arundel County detention FAQ page covers the full list of what you can and cannot send to people in custody.

Anne Arundel County detention frequently asked questions about booking reports

That FAQ also answers questions about the booking process itself, including how long intake takes and what happens to personal items when someone is booked in Anne Arundel County.

Booking Report Requests Under MPIA

The Maryland Public Information Act is the law that controls how you get a copy of booking reports in Anne Arundel County. Under General Provisions § 4-203, agencies must respond to a records request within 30 days. They can grant it, deny it, or say they need more time. If they deny your request for an Anne Arundel County booking report, they must tell you why in writing and cite the specific law that allows the denial.

You have the right to appeal. Section 4-362 of the General Provisions article allows you to seek judicial review if your request is denied. The state also has a Public Access Ombudsman who can help settle disputes without going to court. And the PIA Compliance Board handles complaints about fees over $350 or unlawful denials of booking reports.

Note: Anne Arundel County charges a $10 fee per MPIA request for booking reports, with hourly search fees added after the first two free hours.

Anne Arundel County Court Records

Booking reports in Anne Arundel County often lead to court cases. The Anne Arundel County Circuit Court handles felony cases and serious charges that come from bookings at JRDC and ORCC. The court sits at 8 Church Circle in Annapolis. You can reach the Clerk of Court at 410-222-1397 for questions about case files tied to a booking report.

Court records are separate from booking reports, but the two connect through the case number and the charges. A booking report shows what charges were filed at the time of arrest. The court file shows what happened after that: hearings, plea deals, trials, and sentencing. Together they give you the full picture of a case in Anne Arundel County. You can search court records for free on the Maryland Judiciary Case Search site, which covers all courts in the state.

About 250 volunteers help run programs inside Anne Arundel County's two facilities. These include substance abuse treatment, religious services, and educational classes. Booking reports may note a person's program status if they were enrolled at the time the report was pulled.

Release Notifications in Anne Arundel County

If you want to know when someone booked in Anne Arundel County gets released, contact the Records Department. They can set up alerts for you. For sentenced inmates, you will get a letter within 30 days of release and a phone call on the day they get out. They will also call if the person goes back to court. For pre-trial detainees, you get a call before court dates and before release. Your contact info is never shared with the inmate.

You can also use VINELink to track inmates across Maryland, including Anne Arundel County. This free service sends automated alerts when a person's custody status changes. It works for both state prisons and county facilities.

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Cities in Anne Arundel County

Anne Arundel County has many communities, and all booking reports for the county are handled by the same two facilities. Whether an arrest happens in Glen Burnie, Severn, or anywhere else in the county, the booking report goes through JRDC or ORCC.

Other communities in Anne Arundel County include Annapolis, Crofton, Odenton, Pasadena, Severna Park, and Arnold. All of these use the same Anne Arundel County booking report system.

Nearby Counties

These counties border Anne Arundel County. If you are not sure which county handled a booking, check the arrest location. Each county keeps its own booking reports at its own facilities.