The McPherson County Inmate Population
The local McPherson County inmate population is centered on the McPherson County Jail, the county jail operated by the McPherson County Sheriff's Office. The county research resolved one local detention facility for this build. No separate county annex, work-release center, adult KDOC prison, BOP facility, or ICE detention center was found inside McPherson County from the official source review. City arrests may still pass through the local jail process because Kansas law lets a county jail receive city prisoners committed by courts in the county.
For public lookup purposes, the jail population is not the same thing as the full criminal-justice population tied to McPherson County. The county jail roster covers people recently booked in or housed at the jail. Sentenced state prisoners move into the Kansas Department of Corrections system and are searched through KASPER. Federal inmates and immigration detainees use still different tools. That split matters because a person can disappear from the county roster for a normal reason, such as release, transfer, sentencing, or a hold by another agency.
McPherson County Inmate Population Statistics
The best current local population source in the research is a March 23, 2026 Ad Astra report on a county commission meeting. It quoted Sheriff Jerry Montagne as saying the jail was full at a reported operating capacity of 60 and that some people were being housed at Rice County Jail. The county website itself does not publish a bed count, so the 60-bed figure should be read as a current reported operating capacity, not as a county-published specification.
| Measure | Figure | Source / Date |
|---|---|---|
| Current reported operating capacity | 60 | Ad Astra report, March 23, 2026 county commission coverage |
| Population at reported capacity | 60 / full | Same local report, citing Sheriff Jerry Montagne |
| Female detainees | 7 | Same March 23, 2026 report |
| Municipal-court holds | 6 | Same March 23, 2026 report |
| Arrests in the prior week | 25 | Same March 23, 2026 report |
| People waiting on Larned evaluations | 6 | Same March 23, 2026 report |
McPherson County Inmate Population Trends
McPherson County does not publish a jail dashboard, average daily population series, annual booking report, or demographic report in the official sources reviewed. The trend picture is therefore built from a small number of sourced points. Those points do not form a clean year-by-year series, but they still show why current jail figures need careful sourcing. Older national or advocacy datasets list different numbers than the recent local commission coverage.
| Year or Date | Population / Capacity Point | How to Read It |
|---|---|---|
| 12/31/2013 listing in Census 2020 vintage table | 27 | Prison Policy Initiative correctional population listing, not a current jail dashboard |
| 2022 phone-rate appendix | 72 listed capacity | Prison Policy Initiative phone-rate source tied to Securus data |
| March 23, 2026 | 60 in custody / full | Local report says the jail was full and overflow was being housed in Rice County |
The conflict between the older 72-capacity listing and the 2026 reported 60 capacity is important. The county site does not resolve it with a formal facility specification. The cautious approach is to use the newer 60 figure when discussing current McPherson County jail pressure, while noting that it came from local coverage rather than a county-published bed-count page.
Who Makes Up the McPherson County Inmate Population
The McPherson County Jail population includes recently booked people, pretrial detainees, county prisoners, municipal-court holds, and some people waiting on court-ordered evaluations or transfer. The March 2026 report gave several local details that are more useful than broad statewide averages: seven female detainees were in custody, six people were held for municipal courts, six were waiting for Larned State Hospital evaluations, and one person had waited seven months for an evaluation bed.
- Recent bookings: people arrested by local law enforcement and taken through jail intake.
- Pretrial custody: people still waiting on bond, first appearances, hearings, or case disposition.
- Municipal holds: city-court matters can keep a person in local custody after arrest.
- Evaluation waits: some detainees remain in jail while waiting on court-ordered mental-health evaluations.
- Transfers: full capacity can lead to some people being housed in another county jail.
Race, age, felony/misdemeanor split, sentenced/pretrial ratio, average length of stay, annual bookings, and average daily population were not found in a county-published jail data report. Those gaps should not be filled with guesses. The public record that does exist is stronger on current custody channels than on long-term population analytics.
McPherson County Jail Capacity Pressure
The current pressure point is the March 23, 2026 commission coverage. Sheriff Jerry Montagne reportedly told commissioners the McPherson County Jail was at capacity and that some people were being held in Rice County Jail. The same account said six detainees were waiting for court-ordered Larned evaluations. That detail turns the population count into more than a headcount. Evaluation waits can keep people in county jail even when their case is not moving in a simple arrest-to-release path.
Kansas law also affects jail capacity at the intake door. K.S.A. 19-1930 says a sheriff or jail keeper need not receive or detain a prisoner still in an arresting agency's custody until the person has been examined by medical care if the person appears unconscious, seriously ill, seriously injured, or seriously impaired by alcohol or drugs. That rule is more specific than a generic booking checklist and belongs in any serious discussion of McPherson County jail intake.
McPherson County Jail Record Laws
Public access to McPherson County inmate population information sits between jail-record duties and Kansas open-records limits. The county points requesters to the proper records custodian or Freedom of Information officer. A written request may be required, the request should identify the existing record, and the county says most records are produced within three business days or answered with a written delay or denial.
Key statutes:
K.S.A. 45-215 names the Kansas Open Records Act and frames access to public records.
K.S.A. 45-220 covers agency procedures, written requests, copies, and proof of identity in some cases.
K.S.A. 45-221 lists records that are not required to be disclosed, including law-enforcement and privacy-sensitive categories.
K.S.A. 19-1904 requires a calendar of county-jail prisoners and the information to be kept.
K.S.A. 19-1935 makes certain city and county prisoner death-investigation findings subject to KORA.
Search the McPherson County Jail Roster
The official route starts at the county jail roster disclaimer. That page says the jail database contains public record information on people recently booked in or housed at the McPherson County Jail. After the disclaimer, the county points to the vendor-hosted JailTracker/Public Safety Cloud roster. The county warns that the site is updated regularly but may not show a person's actual current location or other fast-changing information.
The county disclaimer page is visible in the captured source image from the manifest.
The screenshot matters because McPherson County uses a county page first, then sends users to the public roster through an agreement-style link rather than exposing every roster field on the county page itself.
- Open the McPherson County jail roster disclaimer on the county website.
- Read the sheriff's warning that the roster is not criminal history and may change fast.
- Follow the roster link marked "HERE" to the JailTracker/Public Safety Cloud page.
- Search the public roster if it loads in the browser, then confirm urgent custody or release questions by phone.
- If the person was sentenced to KDOC custody, move to KASPER instead of relying on the county jail roster.
McPherson County Roster Access Fields
Static inspection of the vendor roster did not expose a full field list or a sample inmate profile. The page loaded as a JavaScript shell with "Roster Loading..." and an error shell in terminal inspection. Because the research did not verify live search fields, the accurate table is a limitation table rather than a made-up roster form.
| Field Label | Type | Required | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| County disclaimer link | Web link | Yes, to reach the roster path | The county page uses a "HERE" link after the sheriff's disclaimer. |
| Vendor roster fields | Not verified | Unknown | Static inspection returned only the Blazor shell, not field labels. |
| Roster profile fields | Not verified | Unknown | No live individual profile was captured in the research. |
That limitation should change how a search is handled. If the roster will not load, the name is missing, or the arrest happened very recently, the stronger next step is the jail information line at the Sheriff's Office rather than a third-party search result.
McPherson County Inmate Record Contents
The county roster disclaimer supports a narrow claim: the jail database contains recent booking and housing information and is not criminal history. It does not prove which fields appear on a McPherson County Jail profile. For statewide KDOC records, the KASPER field set is much clearer. KDOC says KASPER can show the person's name, KDOC number, physical description, conviction details, release information, housing and movement data, supervision status, and disciplinary findings for violations found guilty.
| Record System | What the Research Supports |
|---|---|
| McPherson County roster | Recent booking or housing information, with rapid-change and accuracy warnings. |
| County records request | Existing jail records may be requested through the custodian or FOI process, subject to KORA limits. |
| KDOC KASPER | Name, KDOC number, physical details, conviction county, case number, location, movement, release data, and supervision status. |
| VINE | Custody status and notification path, not a complete court or criminal-history file. |
McPherson County Jail vs KDOC
McPherson County jail custody and Kansas state-prison custody are separate search problems. The jail roster is the local route for recent bookings, people awaiting court, municipal holds, and local detention. KASPER is the Kansas Department of Corrections repository for people sentenced to the custody of the Kansas Secretary of Corrections since 1980, including current incarceration, supervision, and discharged sentences. KDOC says KASPER updates each working day, excluding weekends.
| Question | County Jail | State Prison / KDOC |
|---|---|---|
| Who is covered | Recently booked people, pretrial detainees, county prisoners, municipal holds | People sentenced to KDOC custody, on post-incarceration supervision, or discharged |
| Operator | McPherson County Sheriff's Office | Kansas Department of Corrections |
| Lookup tool | County roster through JailTracker/Public Safety Cloud | KASPER offender search |
| Main caution | Roster location and status can change rapidly | Release dates can change with credits and program data |
State and Federal Inmate Search
When a McPherson County inmate search leaves the county jail, the correct tool depends on who has custody. KASPER covers Kansas state corrections. VINE can help with custody-status notification. The Federal Bureau of Prisons inmate locator covers federal inmates from 1982 to present. ICE's locator covers people currently in ICE custody or in CBP custody more than 48 hours, using an A-number search or a biographical search.
The Kansas KASPER screenshot in the project manifest shows the statewide locator that should be used after a county case leads to a KDOC sentence.
KASPER is useful when the local roster no longer controls the custody answer, but it is not a substitute for the McPherson County Jail roster while a person is newly booked or waiting on local court action.
- Booking
- Jail intake after arrest, including identity checks, property handling, and entry into local custody records.
- Detainer
- A hold from another agency that may keep a person in custody even if one local charge has a bond.
- PR bond
- A personal-recognizance release based on a promise to appear, rather than cash paid up front.
- KASPER
- The Kansas Department of Corrections search system for sentenced and supervised KDOC populations.
McPherson County Detention Facilities
The facility map resolves to one local detention facility. That facility page is the best place for practical jail details such as the address, phone line, mail format, visitation vendors, and commissary options. There are no adult state prisons, federal prisons, or ICE detention centers inside McPherson County in the official sources reviewed.
- McPherson County Jail - county jail operated by the Sheriff's Office for recent bookings, pretrial detainees, county prisoners, municipal holds, and some transfer or evaluation waits.
McPherson County Inmate Population FAQ
How big is the McPherson County inmate population?
The strongest current source found is the March 23, 2026 local commission coverage reporting 60 people in custody and a full jail. The county website does not publish a current bed count, dashboard, or average daily population report.
How do I search the McPherson County inmate population?
Start at the county jail roster disclaimer, then follow the roster link to JailTracker/Public Safety Cloud. If the roster is down or a recent booking does not appear, call the McPherson County Jail through the Sheriff's Office.
Does the roster show criminal history?
No. The county disclaimer says the roster information is not criminal history and should not be treated as such. Court charges, dispositions, and prosecutor-filed records must be checked through Kansas court channels.
Where are sentenced state prisoners searched?
Use KDOC KASPER. It covers people sentenced to Kansas corrections custody since 1980, including current incarceration, supervision, and discharge records.