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Burleson Texas Police Department
Johnson County - Police Department Jail - Texas
Burleson TX Police Jail

Burleson TX Police Jail is located in the city of Burleson, Texas which has a population of 36,690 (as of 2016) residents. Prisoners are housed in separate areas depending on the crimes they committed, their current risk assessment, and their behavior. This facility is currently under the supervision of Chief of Police Billy Cordell and houses male and female offenders.

If you have a family or loved one that is currently incarcerated at Burleson TX Police Jail, the first thing you should do is contact the prison for information on the inmate. Based on the information you are provided, you would then contact either a criminal defense lawyer or a bail bond service. They will provide you with vital information which can be used to defend an individual and in a lot of cases get them released from detention while awaiting trial.

Burleson TX Police Jail Facility and Inmate Contact Information:

Phone Number to Reach this Facility is:

817-426-9910

Send Mail to the Facility (not inmates):

Burleson TX Police Jail
225 West Renfro Street
Burleson, TX 76028

To Send Mail to an Inmate at Burleson TX Police Jail:

(please get a list of acceptable mail from the facility)

Burleson TX Police Jail
Inmate Name, Inmate ID #
225 West Renfro Street
Burleson, TX 76028

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Recent News for Burleston Texas Police Department:

March 29, 2017 - Extreme tempests traveled through North Texas early Wednesday morning, bringing high winds and substantial downpours. Johnson County Emergency Management Director Jamie Moore said the dominant part of harm from the tempest happened in Joshua and northern Johnson County. Johnson County Commissioner Larry Woolley said his group got up at around 3 a.m. Wednesday to evaluate harm in area 4. "There were territories where it was spotty where substantial trees had fallen," he said. "We will chip away at that throughout the day [Wednesday] and most likely throughout the day [Thursday] to clear those regions." Joshua Fire Chief Wayne Baker said the city of Joshua experienced harm what gave off an impression of being straight-line winds. "We've had no less than two trees fall into two houses and a rooftop that was brushed off of an old stable," he said. "We likewise had a couple trees in the street." Pastry specialist said he was utilizing his unmanned flying machine framework — or ramble — to lead a more top to bottom appraisal of the harm. Burleson Police Chief Billy Cordell said it didn't take the tempest 15 minutes to overcome Burleson, yet it did a considerable amount of harm. "We had around five or six trees that were down and laying crosswise over various streets," he said. "At the Hidden Creek Golf Course, the canopy was tore and beat down and wound up arriving amidst an administration street. The tempest wreaked some ruin on us. "The greater part of the fundamental movement lights have been out. At John Jones Drive and Wilshire Boulevard we have four officers out there right now coordinating activity." Cordell said there were reports of energy blackouts from everywhere throughout the city, including the police office. "We had some power blackouts in our building and when the generator kicked on we had a few issues with our correspondences and we needed to course our 911 calls through Crowley," he said. "However, we are getting back on the web and are operational." A few grounds in the Burleson Independent School District opened Wednesday morning with no power. Starting at 10 a.m., control had been reestablished to all schools aside from Norwood Elementary School. As a result of the morning power blackouts, no STAAR testing occurred in BISD on Wednesday. Understudies will have testing for English 2, fifth-grade perusing and eighth-grade perusing today. On Friday, understudies will have testing for eighth-grade math. Johnson County's southern urban communities seemed to stay away from the vast majority of the tempest. Cleburne Assistant Fire Chief Keith Scarbrough said it was for the most part calm in Cleburne and the Bono range. "We didn't get anything major — it appears like we avoided the vast majority of it," he said. "The wind initiated the sirens in the northern piece of Cleburne when winds grabbed to around 35-40 mph, yet that passed." Cleburne occupant Gayle White said she had recorded 0.94 crawls of rain from the tempest with an official climate gage NBC DFW sent her to track estimations. Godley Police Chief Jason Jordan said the tempest likewise seemed to stay far from Godley. "We had some power blackouts the previous evening," he said. "In any case, that is about it." Rio Vista Police Chief David Niederhaus said Rio Vista was fortunate the previous evening. "We haven't had any reports or seen any harm up until now; we truly avoided this one," he said. "I just took a drive through Burleson and it is quite awful even on [Interstate] 35." Keene Fire Chief Matt Gillan said there has been no basic harm revealed in Keene up until now. "Just a couple brought down trees," he said. "There is one on Old Mansfield Road and another vast tree with harm at Pioneer and Old Betsy streets." Starting at 10 a.m. Wednesday, Oncor announced around 7,815 clients influenced by 110 power blackouts in Burleson, seven clients influenced by three power blackouts in Joshua and 139 clients influenced by four power blackouts in Cleburne. More than 7,000 affected by power outages

 


Warden or Supervisor: Chief of Police Billy Cordell Security Level(s): minimum

225 West Renfro Street
Burleson, TX 76028

Phone Number(s): 817-426-9910

225 West Renfro Street
Burleson, TX 76028