Ford County Inmate Population
The local Ford County inmate population is held at the Ford County Jail, the county detention facility operated by the Ford County Sheriff's Office. The jail holds adults arrested in Ford County, people awaiting court, sentenced misdemeanants, local warrant arrests, probation-violation holds, bond-revocation arrests, and city prisoners committed to county custody. Official research did not locate a separate state prison, federal prison, ICE detention center, regional jail, or second county detention facility inside Ford County. That means the county jail is the local facility page for Ford County jail custody, while sentenced state-prison lookup belongs to KDOC and federal or immigration lookup belongs to federal systems.
The Ford County inmate population rises or falls with arrests, warrants, bond decisions, first appearances, jail releases, probation or parole holds, and transfers out of the county jail. A person may appear in a sheriff arrest feed before a court case is fully filed, and a person may leave the county roster after release or transfer. The Ford County Jail Population Log is the official local starting point, but the page warns that inmate information changes quickly and that recent status changes may not be reflected. For time-sensitive custody questions, the Sheriff's Office is the source to confirm current status.
Ford County Inmate Population Statistics
The strongest sourced statistics for the Ford County inmate population are facility capacity and building facts, not a current head count. The official county jail page and the Kansas Sheriffs' Association profile identify a 256-bed jail, an 80,000-square-foot building, and a design that can expand to 500 beds. The same official source set says the jail was built in 2009 and has specialized areas for medical, safety, juvenile holding, and work release. No official average daily population, annual bookings total, current count, length-of-stay figure, or demographic breakdown was found in the static Ford County sources inspected in June 2026.
| Measure | Figure | Source / Year |
|---|---|---|
| Rated jail capacity | 256 beds | Ford County Jail page and Kansas Sheriffs' Association profile, inspected June 2026 |
| Jail size | 80,000 square feet | Ford County Jail page, inspected June 2026 |
| Expansion design | Up to 500 beds | Ford County Jail page, inspected June 2026 |
| Jail built | 2009 | Kansas Sheriffs' Association profile, inspected June 2026 |
| Current jail population | Not visible in static inspection | Population Log page was present, but no rows were exposed |
Ford County Inmate Population Trends
Ford County publishes a population-log landing page, but the inspected page did not expose current or past jail population rows. Because of that gap, no year-over-year Ford County inmate population trend can be stated from official sources. The accurate local trend statement is narrower: Ford County has a purpose-built county jail with capacity for the current local detention role and a design that allows future expansion. CRIMEWATCH arrest and warrant entries show active booking and warrant workflows, but they are not a population series and should not be converted into jail-count estimates.
| Year | ADP / Count | Official Note |
|---|---|---|
| 2026 | Not located | Population Log page existed, but visible rows were unavailable during inspection |
| 2025 | Not located | No official annual jail population report was located |
| 2024 | Not located | No official annual jail population report was located |
That absence matters. A third-party jail directory may list a number, but the research file did not support using those estimates. For Ford County jail records, sourced county facts should be preferred over scraped counts. The county jail has an official population log and a direct sheriff phone fallback, so those are the better routes for a current status check.
Ford County Jail Capacity
The Ford County Jail design gives more useful detail than many county sources. The official jail page describes direct and indirect supervision with open, raised control posts in the general housing areas. Officers can keep visual control of housing and circulation while remaining protected. Each housing pod has programming and recreation space, which limits movement through the building. The county also notes that video visitation helps reduce inmate movement because inmates generally leave housing pods for court or medical reasons.
The building includes individual cells that can be double bunked, day rooms sized to American Correctional Association standards, a small juvenile holding area with sight-and-sound separation, a negative-air-pressure medical unit, male and female work release areas with separate entrances, and a release or dress-out path that does not cross intake and booking traffic. Those details affect how the Ford County inmate population is managed inside the jail. They also explain why a simple bed count does not tell the whole local custody story.
For a direct screenshot of the county source, see the official Ford County Jail overview.
The screenshot confirms the capacity and building-description source used for the Ford County inmate population discussion.
Ford County Jail Record Laws
Kansas law explains why some Ford County inmate population facts are public while other parts of an arrest file may be limited. The sheriff has charge and custody of the county jail. The sheriff must also keep a true and exact calendar of prisoners committed to the jail. The Kansas Open Records Act favors inspection of public records unless an exception applies, but criminal investigation records can be withheld, and open material must be separated from closed material when possible.
Key Kansas laws:
K.S.A. 19-811 places charge and custody of the county jail with the sheriff.
K.S.A. 19-1904 requires a true and exact calendar of prisoners committed to the county jail.
K.S.A. 45-221 allows some criminal investigation records to be withheld under the Kansas Open Records Act.
The Kansas Attorney General's KORA FAQ says mug shots and standard arrest reports may be discretionarily closed. Kansas AG Opinion 1987-25 draws the same line in plain terms: general jail-book information is open, while mugshots may be treated as criminal investigation records. For Ford County, that means a current custody listing, a court case, and a booking photo are related records, but they do not have the same access rule.
Ford County Sheriff Records
The Ford County Sheriff's Office is the operational source behind local jail custody. The county sheriff page lists Sheriff Bill Carr, the public address at 11311 E Comanche, the mailing address at P.O. Box 747, and the main office phone. The Kansas Sheriffs' Association profile identifies William Carr as sheriff and adds jail leadership and jail administration contacts. Those sources make the Sheriff's Office the correct fallback when the Ford County inmate population log does not answer a current custody question.
The sheriff's CRIMEWATCH records page gives the Records Division a separate role. It records and stores case files, acts as repository and custodian for Sheriff's Office records, maintains incident and accident reports generated by the Sheriff's Office, assists the public with locating reports, researches past incidents, and directs requesters to other agencies when needed. That route matters for older jail-related records, incident reports, and arrest records that are not visible in the current population log.
Search Ford County Inmates
The Ford County inmate search path starts with the official population log. The page is identified as the current listing of jail inmates, but during inspection it displayed a disclaimer rather than visible inmate rows or a usable static search form. The disclaimer says records are for informational purposes only, recent status changes may not be reflected, inmate information may contain errors, and an arrest does not mean conviction. The page gives the Sheriff's Office phone number for questions.
- Open the Ford County Jail Population Log and check whether the current listing is available.
- If the log is blank, stale, or unclear, call the Ford County Sheriff's Office at 620-227-4501 or jail administration at 620-227-4508.
- For recent arrest photos or warrant arrest summaries, check the sheriff's CRIMEWATCH arrests feed.
- For release notices, use Kansas VINELink and set custody notifications when available.
- For sentenced state prisoners, search KDOC KASPER instead of the county population log.
| Field Label | Type | Required | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| No visible search fields in static inspection | n/a | n/a | The page exposed a population-log landing page and related-documents widget, but no rows or filters were visible. |
| Contact fallback | phone | n/a | Call 620-227-4501 for questions or comments about the inmate listing. |
Ford County Inmate Record Fields
The official population-log page did not expose a sample inmate profile during research, so a full roster-field claim would be unsupported. The sheriff's CRIMEWATCH feed does show arrest-entry fields that help readers understand recent booking and warrant material. Those records are useful for current arrest context, but they are not the same as a complete jail roster and do not prove ongoing custody.
| CRIMEWATCH Field | What It Shows |
|---|---|
| Image or photo | A front-facing arrest or warrant photo when the sheriff publishes one. |
| Name and title | The person's name and a charge or warrant label, such as failure to appear. |
| Content type | Arrest, Warrant, or Most Wanted, depending on the feed. |
| Date | Arrest date or publication date, and sometimes a created date. |
| Charge summary | A short description, such as warrant arrest or probation violation. |
| Presumption notice | A statement that accused persons are presumed innocent unless proven guilty. |
For custody records with immediate release or bond consequences, the jail phone line is more reliable than a saved feed card. A screenshot can be old within hours if the person posts bond, is released by court order, or is moved to another agency.
Ford County Custody Lookup
Ford County jail custody, Kansas prison custody, federal custody, and immigration custody use different systems. The county jail roster covers local pretrial and short-sentence custody. KDOC KASPER covers people in Kansas correctional custody or supervision, and KDOC says it updates each working day except weekends. BOP covers federal prisoners from 1982 to the present. ICE ODLS covers immigration detention searches by A-number or by name, country of birth, and birth date.
| Custody Type | Where to Search | Best Use |
|---|---|---|
| Ford County Jail | Population Log and sheriff phone line | Current local jail custody and bond questions |
| Kansas state prison | KDOC KASPER | Sentenced state prisoners and some supervised population records |
| Federal prison | BOP Inmate Locator | Sentenced federal prisoners from 1982 forward |
| Immigration detention | ICE Online Detainee Locator | ICE detainees searched by A-number or identity data |
KDOC's facility map lists no state prison in Ford County. It does list a Dodge City parole office, but that office is a supervision and reentry location, not a jail or prison. BOP and ICE directories also did not identify a federal or immigration detention facility in Ford County.
Ford County Bonds and Holds
Bond status is one of the main reasons the Ford County inmate population changes during a day. The county bonds page publishes the Sixteenth Judicial District approved bondsperson list and gives jail administration at 620-227-4508. It tells people to contact local bonding agencies and to reach the on-duty detention sergeant or staff if there are problems. The list includes approved names, counties served, approval dates, and maximum bond amounts, but no official online payment portal was located.
A bond entry does not always mean the person can leave. A probation violation, bond revocation, bench warrant, outside-agency warrant, federal hold, or immigration detainer can block release until the other authority acts. That is why a Ford County inmate population search should be paired with a jail call before money is paid or travel plans are made.
Ford County Detention Facilities
The resolved facility map has one detention facility for Ford County. The Ford County Jail is the local holding point for the Ford County inmate population. It is also the address tied to sheriff services, jail administration, bonds, mail, property, and health-needs contact paths.
- Ford County Jail - county jail for local adults arrested in Ford County, pretrial detainees, sentenced misdemeanants, warrant arrests, probation-violation holds, and work-release custody.
- Pretrial detainee
- A person held after arrest while a case, bond, or first appearance is pending.
- Detainer
- A request from another agency asking the jail to hold or notify before release.
- KASPER
- The Kansas Adult Supervised Population Electronic Repository for KDOC records.
- VINE
- A custody and case notification system used in Kansas for victim and public alerts.
Ford County Inmate Population FAQ
How big is the Ford County inmate population? Official sources support the jail's rated capacity, not a current count. The Ford County Jail is a 256-bed facility designed for expansion to 500 beds. The official population-log page existed during research, but no current inmate rows were visible in the inspected static page.
Where is the Ford County inmate population searched first? Start with the Ford County Jail Population Log. If it is blank, stale, or unclear, call the Sheriff's Office at 620-227-4501 or jail administration at 620-227-4508.
Does the Ford County inmate population include state prisoners? No. Local jail custody and state prison custody are separate. A person sentenced into KDOC custody should be searched through KASPER, not the county population log.
Are Ford County mugshots always public? No. Ford County publishes some photos through CRIMEWATCH arrests, warrants, and most-wanted feeds, but Kansas law allows mugshots and some arrest reports to be discretionarily closed.