Hays Jail
Police Department Jail | Ellis County County — Kansas | Hays Kansas Police Department
Hays Jail is located in the city of Hays, Kansas which has a population of 21,092 (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 - Don Scheibler and houses male and female offenders.
If you have a family or loved one that is currently incarcerated at Hays 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.
Hays Jail Facility and Inmate Contact Information:
Phone Number to Reach this Facility is:
(785) 625-1030
(785) 625-1011
Email Address for this Facility:
Send Mail to the Facility (not inmates):
Hays Jail
105 W 12th St #112,
Hays, KS 67601, USA
To Send Mail to an Inmate at Hays Jail:
(please get a list of acceptable mail from the facility)
Hays Jail
Inmate Name, Inmate ID #
105 W 12th St #112,
Hays, KS 67601, USA
Hays Kansas Police Department - Facebook
Recent News for Hays Kansas Police Department:
Mar 27, 2017 - A Hays childcare is closed down amid an examination after an infant endures a cerebrum harm. The Kansas Department of Health and Environment is researching Smart Sparks Daycare following a 5-month-old tyke was sent to a Kansas City clinic for treatment. Police say a childcare administrator called 911 last Tuesday evening (March 21) in regards to a tyke who was having restorative issues. That youngster was taken to Hays Medical Center and determined to have a mind harm before being carried to Kansas City. The Secretary of the KDHE suspended the permit of Smart Sparks pending the result of the examination. Now, Hays Police Department Investigator Jeffery Ridgway says they are setting up a course of events to figure out who was around the youngster with the goal that they can make sense of if a wrongdoing was submitted. "It turns into a test when you don't have a man who can impart what did really happen, and it ends up noticeably imperative for those around to convey what happened," Ridgway says. "There are different assets that we will take advantage of to attempt and ensure that we get the entire picture to compensate for that loss of not having the capacity to take a seat with that kid and get, 'this is the thing that happened.' Unfortunately, the one individual who could most likely reveal to us well ordered is recently not competent."
Many correctional facilities let families send books and magazines to an inmate — but almost all of them require the items to be brand-new and shipped directly from the retailer. Anything sent secondhand or repackaged at home is usually rejected at the mailroom. Ordering from a retailer that ships direct is the standard way to get reading material in.
- Must ship new, directly from the retailer — you can't forward it yourself.
- Softcover / paperback only at most facilities (hardcovers are commonly banned).
- No used or third-party marketplace sellers — new copies only.
- Limits on quantity per package and how many packages may be pending.
- Address it to the inmate's full committed name and ID number.
- Use the facility's mailroom address, which can differ from the public address.
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