O'Brien County Inmate Population Overview
The local O'Brien County inmate population is centered on O'Brien County Jail in Primghar. The jail is operated by the O'Brien County Sheriff's Office and receives people arrested by the sheriff, city police departments in Hartley, Sheldon, Sanborn, Paullina, and Sutherland, and the Iowa State Patrol. The sheriff's jail page says the facility holds pretrial detainees and male and female sentenced inmates. It can also accept detainees from surrounding counties, the State of Iowa, and federal channels when those custody arrangements apply.
The local count rises and falls for reasons that do not always show in a public PDF. New arrests add people to the jail, court bond decisions may release them, and felony sentences can move them into the Iowa Department of Corrections. The sheriff's public record source is an arrest-log PDF, not a real-time population dashboard. That makes the O'Brien County inmate population a records task as much as a numbers task: use the arrest log to see recent booking facts, then call the jail when the question is whether a person is still in custody.
O'Brien County's detention footprint is also easy to misread because only one jail is physically mapped in the county, while several outside systems can still hold people with O'Brien County cases. No Iowa state prison, BOP prison, or ICE detention center was found in official sources inside the county. A local arrest may begin at the Primghar jail, then later move to the Iowa DOC, U.S. Marshals custody, BOP custody, or an immigration locator depending on the case.
IowaVINE information from the Iowa Attorney General is also relevant because it gives custody and case notifications for Iowa jails and correctional systems.
IowaVINE is not the sheriff's roster, but it is a separate notification channel when a custody or case status alert matters.
O'Brien County Inmate Population Statistics
O'Brien County has two kinds of useful numbers. The first kind comes from current sheriff facility pages, which describe beds, holding spaces, staff, building size, and food-service volume. The second kind comes from historical datasets such as the Vera Institute county jail data. Those sources should not be blended as if they came from the same day. The sheriff's 2026 materials describe present facility design, while the Vera figures describe past jail-population trends.
| Measure | Figure | Source / Date |
|---|---|---|
| General-population beds | 42 | O'Brien County Sheriff jail page, inspected June 2026 |
| Holding-area spaces | 10 | O'Brien County Sheriff jail page, inspected June 2026 |
| Total capacity description | Up to 54 inmates | Sheriff history page, inspected June 2026 |
| Historical jail population | 34 | Vera county dataset, 2019 row |
| Jail admissions | 179 | Vera county dataset, 2019 row |
| Full-time jailers | 11 | O'Brien County Sheriff jail page, inspected June 2026 |
O'Brien County Inmate Population Trends
The Vera trend row places the O'Brien County jail population in the low-to-mid 30s from 2015 through 2020. That is useful history, not a same-day custody count. The sheriff's public materials did not include a current daily population dashboard, current average daily population report, average length of stay report, or current demographic table. When a current count is needed, the safest official path is direct jail contact.
| Year | Jail Population / ADP-Style Figure | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 34.485 | Vera total_jail_pop row |
| 2019 | 34 | Male 32, female 2, pretrial 34 |
| 2018 | 33 | Admissions 171.5, rated capacity 35.33 |
| 2017 | 33 | Admissions 157.75, rated capacity 36.67 |
| 2016 | 31 | Admissions 165.25, rated capacity 38 |
| 2015 | 35 | Admissions 173.75, rated capacity 39.33 |
Iowa DOC daily statistics give a separate statewide prison count. The June 12, 2026 DOC context in the research shows an institutional count of 8,937, capacity of 6,990, and statewide prison overcrowding of 27.85 percent. Those are prison-system numbers, not an O'Brien County Jail count.
The DOC statistics help explain state-prison pressure after sentencing, while county jail custody remains a sheriff and court issue.
Who Makes Up O'Brien County Inmates
The 2019 Vera row is the best researched demographic snapshot. It lists a jail population of 34, with 32 male and 2 female detainees. It also lists all 34 as pretrial custody for that row. Race and ethnicity fields include Black population 2, Latinx population 15, White population 14, Native population 2, and AAPI population 1. These values should be handled as historical dataset fields, not current jail-booking totals.
The same row lists 30 people from federal and U.S. Marshals categories. That is notable because the sheriff's official jail page says O'Brien County Jail can hold federal inmates. Still, a federal history field does not mean every person with an O'Brien County connection is searched through the sheriff's PDF. Sentenced federal prisoners belong in the BOP Inmate Locator, and federal pretrial custody can involve the U.S. Marshals Service.
O'Brien County Jail Capacity
The sheriff's jail page describes 42 general-population beds and 10 holding-area spaces for people waiting for court or transport. The history page describes the current jail as capable of holding up to 54 inmates. General population is split into four pods: two eight-person pods, one 24-person pod, an administrative-control pod for two, and a two-person juvenile-designated pod. The building is just under 25,000 square feet and was completed in November 2000 after an 82 percent bond approval.
Vera's 2019 row lists jail_rated_capacity as 34. That older dataset value is different from the sheriff's current capacity description. Treat the difference as a source and date issue. The safest reading is that the sheriff's pages describe the current physical facility, while the dataset provides a historical series useful for trend work.
The layout also explains why the same building can serve several custody needs. The jail page describes holding space for people waiting for court or transport, general-population pods for housed detainees, an administrative-control pod, and a juvenile-designated pod. The building also contains the county 911 center, sheriff office space, Emergency Management Agency staff areas, training rooms, and a full kitchen. Those details make the facility more than a bed count.
O'Brien County Inmate Record Laws
Public access to O'Brien County jail and booking information is shaped by Iowa law. Iowa Code chapter 22 is the open-records law and supports access unless a specific exception applies. Section 22.7(5) makes law-enforcement investigative reports confidential, but date, time, specific location, and immediate facts and circumstances of an incident are treated differently unless disclosure would harm an investigation or create a safety risk.
Key record rules: Iowa Code chapter 356 places county jail custody with the sheriff. Iowa Administrative Code chapter 201-50 sets jail-facility standards. Iowa Code chapter 904 governs DOC offender records after state commitment. Iowa Code chapter 331 includes death-report provisions for deaths in a jail or correctional institution.
Search O'Brien County Inmate Population
The official local custody channel is the sheriff's O'Brien County Sheriff's Office Arrest Log. It is a static PDF, not an interactive jail roster. The inspected PDF covered May 12, 2026 through June 12, 2026 and did not have search boxes, filters, tabs, login, pagination, or mugshots. Use browser or PDF find to search the document, then read release lines carefully.
- Open the sheriff arrest-log PDF and confirm the date range printed at the top.
- Search inside the PDF for last name, agency, charge code, incident number, or warrant number.
- Read the arresting agency, disposition, charge list, release line, and cell or housing code when shown.
- Call O'Brien County Jail at 712-957-5245 if the question is current custody.
- Use the Iowa DOC, BOP, ICE, or IowaVINE channels when the person is outside county jail custody.
O'Brien County Jail Record Fields
The arrest log gives a detailed booking and arrest record even though it is not a live roster. It can show arrest date, incident number, arresting agency, location, JA or JAILED disposition, full name, DOB, age, address, race, sex, height, weight, hair, eye color, charge code, charge description, warrant number, issuing agency, release detail, and cell code. It does not show a booking photo.
| Field | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Arrested | Date tied to the arrest entry. |
| Incident # | Sheriff or agency report number, such as 26-002824. |
| Charges | Code, description, incident number, warrant number, and issuing agency. |
| Release | Date, time, reason code, and cell for many entries. |
| Cell | Housing code such as H2, H3, or H4 when displayed. |
County Jail vs State Prison
O'Brien County Jail handles pretrial detainees and local jail sentences. Iowa DOC handles people who have moved into state prison, work release, parole, probation, compact supervision, or another DOC status. No Iowa DOC prison is physically located in O'Brien County, and no BOP or ICE detention center was found in official sources inside the county.
| Custody Type | Correct Search Channel | What It Covers |
|---|---|---|
| Recent county arrest | Sheriff arrest log and jail phone | County jail booking and current custody confirmation |
| State prison or supervision | Iowa DOC Offender Search | DOC offenders, prison, supervision, and county of commitment |
| Federal sentenced custody | BOP Inmate Locator | Federal inmates from 1982 to present |
| Immigration custody | ICE Online Detainee Locator | A-number or biographical searches for ICE detention |
The Iowa DOC districts and prisons list confirms that state-prison lookup is separate from the O'Brien County jail roster.
The prison list helps explain why O'Brien County has one local jail page while sentenced prisoners are searched through statewide DOC records.
O'Brien County Detention Facility
There is one local detention facility in the O'Brien County facility map. The jail at the sheriff's office is the place to check for county arrests, visitation scheduling, and current custody questions. People sentenced to Iowa prison move into DOC systems, and federal or immigration custody requires federal locators.
- O'Brien County Jail - secure county jail for pretrial detainees, male and female sentenced inmates, local police arrests, and other agency custody when accepted.
O'Brien County Inmate Population FAQ
Is there a live O'Brien County jail roster?
The official source found in the research is an arrest-log PDF, not a searchable live roster. It is useful for recent arrest and booking fields, but the jail line is the current-custody fallback.
Does the arrest log prove someone is still jailed?
No. Many entries include a release date, release time, reason code, and cell. A name in the PDF can mean the person was arrested during the report period, not that the person remains in custody.
Where are O'Brien County state prisoners searched?
Use Iowa DOC Offender Search after a person is sentenced or transferred to DOC custody. That system is separate from O'Brien County Jail and is updated on its own schedule.
Are mugshots shown in the O'Brien County arrest log?
No booking photos appeared in the inspected arrest-log PDF. The sheriff fee schedule lists mug shots and investigative photos at $1 per print, so request access through sheriff records.