Aurora Recent Bookings

Aurora recent bookings are processed through the Aurora Police Department, which operates a holding facility for temporary detention at 1200 E Indian Trail. With nearly 180,000 residents, Aurora is the second-largest city in Illinois and generates a steady flow of arrest activity. People booked by Aurora police are held briefly before being transferred to the Kane County jail for extended custody. If you need to find someone who was recently arrested in Aurora, understanding this two-step process helps you search the right system. Booking records from Aurora tie into both the city police and the Kane County Sheriff's Office.

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Aurora Recent Bookings Quick Facts

179,898 Population
Kane County
630-256-5000 Police Phone
#2 Largest IL City

Aurora Bookings and Kane County

Aurora sits primarily in Kane County, which operates the county jail and long-term detention facility. When Aurora police make an arrest, the person is brought to the police department holding cells first. This is a temporary stop. After initial processing, most people are transferred to the Kane County jail in St. Charles for extended custody. The Kane County Sheriff's Office handles the booking from that point forward.

The Kane County Sheriff runs a detainee search page that lets you look up people currently in the county jail. You can search three ways: by alphabet, by name, or by date range. This is the best tool for finding someone booked through Aurora who has been moved to county custody. The sheriff's office phone number is (630) 232-6840 if you need to call.

Because Aurora straddles county lines, a small part of the city extends into DuPage, Kendall, and Will counties. Most arrests within Aurora fall under Kane County jurisdiction. But if the arrest happened in one of those border areas, the booking could end up in a different county system. Check Kane County first since that covers the majority of Aurora.

Aurora Police Department Booking Process

The Aurora Police Department is based at 1200 E Indian Trail, Aurora, IL 60505. The main phone number is 630-256-5000. For questions about someone currently in the holding facility, call the detainee information line at 630-256-5770. That line can tell you if a person is still at the Aurora police station or has been transferred to Kane County.

The Aurora Police Department website is the starting point for information about local law enforcement and booking procedures in the city.

Aurora Police Department website for recent bookings and public safety information

Aurora's holding facility is not a full jail. It is set up for short-term detention while officers process paperwork and charges. Most people move to the Kane County jail within 24 to 48 hours. This means the window to find someone at the Aurora police station is short. If you call the detainee line and they are no longer there, switch to the Kane County detainee search to continue tracking recent bookings from Aurora.

How to Search Aurora Recent Bookings

Finding someone recently booked in Aurora involves checking two places. Start with the Aurora Police Department by calling the detainee line at 630-256-5770. Staff can tell you if the person is still in the city holding cells. If they have been transferred, move to the Kane County detainee search at kanesheriff.com.

The Kane County search tool is straightforward. Enter a first or last name and it pulls up matching records from the jail roster. Results show custody status, charges, and bond information. The tool updates as people are booked in and released. If the person was arrested within the last day or two in Aurora, there may be a brief delay before they appear in the county system while the transfer is processed.

Aurora also maintains an Open Data Portal with crime statistics and public safety data. While this does not function as a real-time booking search, it can provide context about arrest patterns in the city. The police department publishes certain data sets that may help with broader records research tied to Aurora.

Note: Aurora's holding facility handles temporary detention only, so check Kane County for anyone held longer than 48 hours.

Public Access to Aurora Arrest Records

Booking and arrest records in Aurora are public under the Illinois Freedom of Information Act (5 ILCS 140). Anyone can request copies of public records without giving a reason. The Aurora Police Department must have a designated FOIA officer under 5 ILCS 140/3.5. They must respond to written or electronic requests within five business days.

For basic booking checks, you usually do not need to file a formal FOIA request. The detainee information phone line and the Kane County online search handle most lookups. Formal FOIA requests make more sense when you need incident reports, arrest narratives, or records that the online tools do not cover. Under 5 ILCS 140/4, the first 50 pages of records are usually free. Beyond that, the agency may charge copying fees.

Limits apply to what you can get. Juvenile records are not public. Sealed and expunged records are removed from databases. Medical details, Social Security numbers, and information about active investigations are also exempt from FOIA disclosure in Illinois. If your request is denied, the Aurora Police Department must explain why. You can appeal to the Illinois Attorney General's Public Access Counselor.

Illinois Resources for Aurora Bookings

State-level databases can supplement your search for recent bookings tied to Aurora. The Illinois Department of Corrections has an inmate search tool that covers people serving time in state prison. If someone arrested in Aurora received a felony conviction and was sent to a state facility, that database shows their current location and projected release date. It does not cover people in Kane County jail.

The Illinois State Police Bureau of Identification maintains the central criminal history repository at 260 N. Chicago Street in Joliet. Call (815) 740-5160 for information about background checks. They offer name-based and fingerprint-based checks. Conviction records are available to the public. Non-conviction data and sealed records are restricted.

The VINE notification system works in Kane County and across Illinois. You can register to receive alerts when someone's custody status changes. This is useful if you want to know when a person booked through Aurora gets released from Kane County jail or is transferred to another facility.

Court records are also available after a booking. The Illinois courts re:SearchIL system at illinoiscourts.gov provides free basic searches for case information tied to arrests in Aurora and Kane County.

Note: IDOC covers state prison inmates only and does not include people held in Kane County jail awaiting trial.

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Nearby Cities with Booking Records

Aurora borders several other large cities in the western suburbs of Chicago. If the arrest happened near a city line, the person may have been booked by a neighboring police department instead. Each city below handles its own bookings before transfers go to the relevant county jail.