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Are there court records, booking logs, or public dockets showing dates and locations for Leticia Jones’s arrest and charges?
Executive summary
Available public records in the supplied search results show multiple places where arrest logs, jail rosters and court dockets can be found — including county sheriff “recent bookings” pages and PDF arrest logs — but none of the provided sources show a clear, specific arrest record for a person named “Leticia Jones” tied to a single, unambiguous arrest event the user asked about (available sources do not mention a booking log or court docket entry specifically for Leticia Jones’s arrest and charges) [1] [2] [3] [4] [5].
1. Where arrest logs and booking lists live — official portals and PDFs
Local law enforcement agencies commonly publish arrest logs, recent bookings, or inmate rosters on their websites; examples found in the search results include a Huntington Beach Police Department adult arrest log PDF (a posted arrest log file) [1], a Davidson County (Nashville) “Recent Bookings” page from the sheriff’s office [2], and printable jail rosters/current rosters used by some county jails [3]. These are the primary public records reporters and members of the public use to find dates, locations and arresting agencies.
2. Commercial aggregators and county jail portals — coverage and limits
Aggregators such as Arrests.org collect open booking information [6], and many counties provide searchable inmate lists (for example, Johnston County’s jailed-person list and Cherokee County’s inmate search) [7] [8]. These sources can show arrest dates, booking agencies and charges, but they are snapshots and sometimes incomplete; local booking logs may not reflect later case filings or corrected identities.
3. Court dockets vs. booking logs — what each shows and where to look
Court dockets and criminal case listings (trial schedules, settings, web dockets) are separate from jail booking logs. The search results include examples of court dockets and case-finding portals — e.g., UniCourt listings for civil and criminal cases like Leticia Jones v. Sisters of St. Dominic and a Florida criminal case for a “Leticia Celeste Jones” [4] [5]. These docket portals can show charges, filing dates and dispositions but may not tie directly to the local arrest booking entry unless the same jurisdiction hosts both records.
4. Name collisions and the need for exact identifiers
“Leticia Jones” is a common name; the results show multiple people with similar names in different contexts (a civil case involving a Leticia Jones on UniCourt [4], a Florida criminal record for a Leticia Celeste Jones [5], and multiple public profiles for Dr. Leticia A. Jones, an OB/GYN in Little Rock) (p3_s1–p3_s8). Searching arrest logs and dockets without middle names, dates of birth, or jurisdiction increases the risk of misidentifying records — researchers should use additional identifiers and the specific jurisdiction where the arrest allegedly occurred.
5. What the supplied results actually show about “Leticia Jones” arrests
Among supplied documents, there is no single arrest booking record or public docket that unmistakably documents an arrest and charge entry labeled solely as “Leticia Jones” tied to the user’s implied recent arrest event. The Huntington Beach arrest log lists other JONES entries but not the specific Leticia Jones arrest the user asked about in the available snippet [1]. UniCourt shows civil and criminal case profiles for persons named Leticia or Leticia‑variant Jones but not a clear, matching arrest-and-charge booking for the same person in one arrest log [4] [5]. Therefore, the supplied reporting does not confirm a singular booking log or court docket entry for “Leticia Jones” that answers the user’s question directly (available sources do not mention a specific arrest booking and charges for Leticia Jones).
6. How to proceed if you want a definitive booking or docket
To find a specific arrest/booking date and location you should: (a) identify the jurisdiction (city, county, or state) where the alleged arrest occurred, (b) search that jurisdiction’s sheriff or police “recent bookings,” arrest log, or inmate roster PDF (examples above show typical formats) [1] [2] [3], and (c) search the local court’s public docket or a case-finder like UniCourt for matching criminal case numbers or defendant names [4] [5]. If privacy or sealed records are involved, those records may not be publicly accessible (available sources do not mention sealed records in this set).
7. Caveats, alternative explanations and potential misinformation risks
Because multiple individuals share similar names and because aggregators and agency snapshots can lag or misindex entries, relying on a single online hit risks misidentification [6] [7]. Also, some media coverage in the results conflates or misnames public figures (e.g., many items discuss Letitia James, New York’s attorney general) — do not conflate “Leticia Jones” with similarly spelled public figures unless the record explicitly matches identifiers [9] [10]. The supplied sources include high‑profile reporting about Letitia James (different name and person) and a number of local roster examples, but none provide the single, corroborated booking/docket you requested [10] [3].
If you can supply the jurisdiction (city/county/state) or a middle name/date of birth, I will search the sources you provided again for more targeted matches and point to the exact arrest log, booking PDF or court docket entry if it is present in these documents.