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Hartley County, Texas

Essentials
13
Total sources
26
Court-clerk note
Texas
  • Texas has 254 counties — the most of any state. Each county runs its own District Court (felonies, civil over $200, family) and County Court (misdemeanors, civil under $200K, probate). Some metro counties have multiple criminal/civil district courts.
  • re:SearchTX (research.txcourts.gov) is the closest thing to a statewide aggregator. Coverage varies by county; most metro counties participate, but smaller counties may require visiting the local district clerk site directly.
  • Texas Public Information Act (Gov. Code Ch. 552) lets you request records without stating a reason. Agencies must respond within 10 business days; if they want to withhold, they must seek an Attorney General opinion.
  • Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) is for STATE prison inmates only. County jails are separate — for those, search the county sheriff's site (HCSO for Harris, DCSO for Dallas, etc.).
  • Texas Sex Offender Registry is run by DPS; search by name, ZIP, or city. Includes physical description and offense; cross-check against federal NSOPW for cross-state.
  • Marriage records are filed at the County Clerk level, not statewide. For genealogy or older marriages there is a state index, but current licenses live with the county.
Guided record check

Run this in order.

Start with the systems most likely to change your read of a person. Then cross-check custody, registries, and paper-trail sources before you go wider.

Case file · 48205
0 of 13 essentials reviewed
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Deeper directory: 0/13 reviewed
01 · The docket layer

Start with courts

2 sources

Run county and statewide court portals first. Civil, criminal, family, and lower-court systems are often separate, so this is where most missed records happen.

Start with courts
2 entries
STATECourt
Texas re:Search — Statewide Court Records Search
Statewide aggregator: civil and criminal cases from participating counties
Free for case info; documents may have per-page fees
Open ↗
The closest thing TX has to a statewide search. Coverage varies county-by-county — most metros participate, smaller counties may not. Search by name; click into a case for the docket. If a county is missing, go to that county's District Clerk site directly.
02 · Current risk signals

Check custody and registries

3 sources

Use jail, corrections, and registry systems to catch records that do not show up in a normal court search.

Check custody and registries
3 entries
STATERegistry
Texas Sex Offender Registry (DPS)
Statewide. Search by name, ZIP, city, or address.
Free
Open ↗
Run by Texas DPS. Includes photo, physical description, registered address, offense, risk level. Cross-check against federal NSOPW.
03 · Context and corroboration

Pull the paper trail

5 sources

Recorder, assessor, prosecutor, records-request, and licensing sources help verify addresses, liens, ownership, agency records, and local context.

Pull the paper trail
5 entries
STATERecords
Texas Public Information Act Records Request
City PD or county sheriff records division
Varies (often free; copies $0.10–$1 per page)
Open ↗
10-business-day response requirement. See the Email Scripts page for TX-specific framing language. If the agency wants to withhold, they must seek an AG opinion.
STATEBusiness
Texas Secretary of State — SOSDirect Business Search
LLC, corporation, LP, LLP filings: officers, agents, status
Free for basic search; SOSDirect account for full filings ($1/search)
Open ↗
Critical for finding businesses someone owns or operates. Free public search returns name, status, registered agent. SOSDirect (paid account, $1 per search) returns full filings including officers and history.
04 · Outside the county

Run the federal backstop

3 sources

Federal court and incarceration systems sit outside local portals. Run them before you decide the search is clean.

Run the federal backstop
3 entries
FEDERALCourt
PACER (Public Access to Court Electronic Records)
Federal District, Appeals, and Bankruptcy courts. Over 1 billion documents filed. $0.10/page (capped at $3.00/document); free if quarterly charges under $30. Account required for search. Confirmed live 2026-05-03.
Per-page fee, often waived under $30/quarter
Open ↗
PACER catches federal cases the state DOC and state courts will not. Account required, small per-search fees. Worth using for white-collar, federal drug, immigration, and bankruptcy.
FEDERALCorrections
Federal Bureau of Prisons Inmate Locator
All federal prison inmates, current and historical from 1982. Search by name (with race/sex/age filters) or inmate number. Note: search backend showed intermittent error during 2026-05-03 verification — likely temporary. If main tool is down, try https://www.bop.gov/mobile/find_inmate/byname.jsp as fallback.
Free
Open ↗
Free, fast, includes alias search. Use whenever the state DOC comes up empty and you suspect federal involvement.
FEDERALRegistry
National Sex Offender Public Website (NSOPW)
All 50 states aggregated, plus DC, US territories, and tribal nations. Search by name or location. DOJ-operated. Named after Dru Sjodin. Also links to abuse reporting resources. Confirmed live 2026-05-03.
Free
Open ↗
Cross-state coverage in one search. Run after the state-level registry to catch out-of-state moves.
Statute · Texas public records law

Texas runs the Public Information Act (Gov. Code Chapter 552) — strong on paper, generally responsive in practice (10 business days for most agencies). The state-court system is fragmented: Texas has 254 counties (the most of any state) and each runs its own District and County courts. The Office of Court Administration runs re:SearchTX as a statewide aggregator, but coverage varies by county and full-document access often costs money.

Typical response · 10 business days for most records requests under Public Information Act; instant for online court and registry lookups