Search Layton Jail Roster

Layton Jail Roster searches usually begin with Davis County custody, then move back to the Layton Police Department when you need the report behind the arrest. That split matters because the booking record and the police file often live in different offices. If you are trying to confirm who is in custody, identify the arresting agency, or request a report from Layton, this page keeps the local path straight. It points you toward the city records desk, the county roster, and the next step when you need the paper trail after the booking.

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Layton Jail Roster Basics

Layton does not run the jail itself. Davis County Jail does. The jail is at 800 West State Street in Farmington, UT 84025, and the main phone is 801-451-4100. For a Layton Jail Roster search, that county address matters because it tells you where custody lives and where a booking should appear. The county roster is the direct way to see whether a person is held, while the city side handles the record that came from the arrest or incident.

The Davis County roster is available through NextRequest and the Davis County Sheriff inmate roster. The roster shows full names, booking dates, sex, arresting agency, and age. It updates hourly and works well on a phone, so it is useful when you are checking a name on the go. That mix of details makes the Layton Jail Roster easier to read because you can see both who is in custody and which agency handled the booking.

Layton City adds the local records piece. The city address is 437 N Wasatch Dr, Layton, UT 84041, and the City Recorder can be reached at 801-336-3880. Records hours are weekdays from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. That office matters when a roster entry leads you back to the city report, and it is often the cleanest route when you already know the incident date, location, or case number.

Layton Jail Roster Search

The county roster is the fastest first check. If a person was booked after a Layton arrest, the Davis County record should show the current custody status, booking time, and arresting agency. That is the point where a simple name search turns into a useful search. Once you have the booking, the county page can guide you toward the next step, whether that is a phone call, a custody question, or a records request back in Layton.

Layton also offers online reporting through the city website, which helps when the incident started as a police report and later turned into a booking. The online form and the records division work together. You can begin with the report path, then use the county roster to see whether the person moved into jail. That is a practical Layton Jail Roster workflow because it keeps the city incident, the county custody, and the release question in one sequence.

This county roster screenshot source is the Davis County Sheriff inmate roster at daviscountyutah.gov/sheriff/jail/inmate-roster.

Layton Jail Roster county roster resource

That image points to the custody side of the search. It is the right place to start when you need the live booking trail before you ask for the police file.

Layton Jail Roster Records

Layton police records are handled through the Records Division and the City Recorder path. The city FAQ says requests can start online through the Online Police Record Request form or in person at the Records Division Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., except legal holidays. In-person requests are reviewed with a valid government-issued photo ID or notarized identity. Mail requests may also be accepted when the signature is notarized. The city FAQ is available at Layton City FAQ, and the record request portal is at Online Police Record Request.

The requester category on the online form matters. Layton asks whether the request is from an individual, a business or non-government organization, or a government entity. That is a good sign that the city is screening requests before release. Under Utah GRAMA, some arrest records and police reports are private or confidential, so proof of eligibility may be needed before the record leaves the file. That is not unusual. It is how the city protects records that are not open in full.

When you are dealing with a Layton Jail Roster result, the city record often answers the bigger question. The roster tells you the booking. The police report explains the event. If you need the case file, use the records page, name the report clearly, and include the date, address, and parties if you have them. That helps the records desk match the report to the booking without sending you back through the whole search.

Layton Jail Roster Fees

Layton lists a per-incident report fee and separate charges for photos, audio, or video. The online request page says the first hour of preparation and redaction time is included in the media fee structure, and additional time can raise the cost. The city FAQ also notes that copies and photos can have their own charges. That means a Layton Jail Roster search may start free at the roster and then move to a paid record request once you ask for the actual report.

A quick copy request can stay simple. A longer request can take more time, especially if the file includes body camera footage, audio, or still photos. Those extras matter because they are often tied to the events that led to the booking, not just the booking itself. The important part is knowing that the roster and the report live in different places and may follow different release rules.

Utah GRAMA gives the legal frame for that review process, and Layton's page makes clear that some requests need closer screening. Juvenile records stay protected, and active investigations can be exempt. The city also has a ten business day response window, so if your request takes time, that is usually part of the normal process rather than a sign that the record is missing. Note: the roster can be immediate while the report still waits on review.

Layton Jail Roster Contacts

For the city side, start with the Layton online police record request page and the City Recorder page. Those pages help you move from a public roster hit to the report file and the request form. The city records desk is the best place to ask about release rules, requester type, or whether the report needs extra identity proof before it can be handed over.

For the county side, the Davis County jail roster at daviscountyutah.gov/sheriff/jail/inmate-roster and the county request portal at daviscountyut.nextrequest.com are the live custody tools. If you want a broader court trail, Utah Courts can help connect the booking to the criminal case, and Vinelink can help with custody alerts. That combination is useful when the Layton Jail Roster search is only the first step.

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Layton Jail Roster Links

These are the main official paths for a Layton Jail Roster search. Use the county roster for custody, then the city request pages when you need the report behind the arrest.

If the roster and the report do not match at first glance, check the booking date and arresting agency again. Those two details usually explain the gap.