Search King and Queen County Busted Mugshots

King and Queen County busted mugshots and arrest records are maintained by the King and Queen County Sheriff's Office and the Circuit Court Clerk in King and Queen Court House, Virginia. The Middle Peninsula Regional Security Center handles local inmate custody. This page covers how to find King and Queen County booking photos, criminal case records, and inmate information through local offices and statewide Virginia tools.

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King and Queen County Overview

~7,000 Population
KQ Court House County Seat
9th Judicial Circuit
MPRSC Regional Jail

King and Queen County Sheriff's Office

The King and Queen County Sheriff's Office is the primary law enforcement agency in this small rural county. The Sheriff handles all arrests, maintains booking records, and runs the jail processes. When a person is taken into custody, the Sheriff's Office records their name, charges, and date and time of arrest, and takes a booking photograph. These records are public under Virginia law.

The Sheriff's website is at kingandqueenco.net/sheriff. You can submit a FOIA request to this office for arrest records. Under Virginia Code §2.2-3706(A)(2), adult booking photos taken at initial intake are subject to mandatory release. The only time they can be withheld is when releasing the photo would harm an active felony investigation.

Visit the King and Queen County Sheriff's Office website to learn how to submit a public records request for arrest information and booking photos. King and Queen County busted mugshots Sheriff's Office

The King and Queen County Sheriff's Office processes all local arrests and maintains the booking records that are the primary source for county mugshots.

Office King and Queen County Sheriff's Office
Website kingandqueenco.net/sheriff
Circuit Court kingandqueenco.net/circuit-court
Regional Jail Middle Peninsula Regional Security Center

King and Queen County Circuit Court

The King and Queen County Circuit Court handles felony criminal cases. Court files include the charges, case status, hearing dates, and final disposition. The Circuit Court Clerk's office is the official keeper of these records. You can contact the Clerk at kingandqueenco.net/circuit-court to request copies or search in person.

The King and Queen County Circuit Court Clerk's website provides contact information and instructions for accessing criminal court records linked to local arrests. King and Queen County arrest records Circuit Court

The Circuit Court Clerk maintains felony criminal case files for King and Queen County, which trace back to arrests made by the Sheriff's Office and contain the full case history from filing to disposition.

The Virginia Judiciary Online Case Information System (OCIS) lets you search King and Queen County court records online for free. Look up by name or case number and filter by locality. OCIS covers circuit court criminal cases as well as General District Court misdemeanor records for the county. It is a good first stop before contacting the Clerk's office directly.

Middle Peninsula Regional Security Center

Inmates arrested in King and Queen County are held at the Middle Peninsula Regional Security Center (MPRSC). This facility serves several Middle Peninsula counties and maintains booking records for all people processed there. The MPRSC website is at mprsc.org.

The Middle Peninsula Regional Security Center handles inmate custody for King and Queen County arrests, maintaining booking photos and records for all people held at the facility. King and Queen County busted mugshots Middle Peninsula Regional Security Center

The MPRSC serves multiple Middle Peninsula counties including King and Queen, and its records are the primary source for current inmate information and booking photos for county arrests.

Use VINE (Victim Information and Notification Everyday) to check current custody status for King and Queen County inmates. VINE is the free official statewide service for Virginia jail notifications. It covers the MPRSC and lets you register for alerts when an inmate's status changes. You can search by name or offender ID and get real-time custody information without contacting the jail.

The Virginia State Police Central Criminal Records Exchange at vsp.virginia.gov covers King and Queen County arrests in a statewide criminal history database. A name-based search costs $15 and uses the SP-167 form from vsp.virginia.gov/services/forms. Results take about 15 days. The CCRE holds fingerprints, photos, and the complete criminal history for every person arrested in Virginia.

The sex offender registry at sex-offender.vsp.virginia.gov lists registered sex offenders in King and Queen County. Search by county or zip code to see photos, addresses, and offense details. The registry is free, public, and updated each business day. It is required by Virginia Code §19.2-390.1. For people interested in specific offenders in King and Queen County, this is a reliable official source of offender photos.

The third-party database virginia.arrests.org aggregates recent Virginia booking data, including King and Queen County arrests. It shows mugshots, charges, and booking dates. While not an official government source, it compiles public records and is updated frequently. It works as a quick first look before going to official sources.

The FOIA Advisory Council at foiacouncil.dls.virginia.gov provides guidance on what records must be released under §2.2-3706. Adult mugshots and felony arrest information must be released by King and Queen County law enforcement upon public request.

Expunging King and Queen County Arrests

Virginia Code §19.2-392.2 lets people arrested in King and Queen County who were not convicted petition the Circuit Court for expungement. This applies if your charges were dismissed or you were found not guilty. The petition is filed in King and Queen County Circuit Court.

You submit fingerprints to law enforcement, which sends them to the CCRE. The CCRE provides your criminal history to the court under seal. The court holds a hearing and rules on the petition. If approved, the Clerk notifies the Virginia State Police, which manages record removal. Expunged records come off public access but remain visible to authorized government agencies for legitimate purposes.

Virginia's record sealing laws effective July 1, 2026 will allow some convictions to be sealed under Title 19.2, Chapter 23. Talk to a local attorney if you have questions about a specific King and Queen County case.

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Nearby Counties

These counties border or sit near King and Queen County on the Middle Peninsula of Virginia.