What Happens When Someone Is Arrested by Mount Dora Jail
The Mount Dora Jail in Mount Dora, Florida is a municipal law enforcement agency. Officers patrol the city, respond to calls, investigate crimes, and make arrests within Mount Dora's jurisdiction. Mount Dora Jail does not operate a long-term jail. Arrestees may be held briefly in a Mount Dora Jail holding cell or booking room, typically only for the few hours required to complete initial processing, before being transferred to the Lake County jail for arraignment and longer-term housing. If you're trying to locate or contact someone just arrested in Mount Dora, the destination within hours of arrest is almost always the county jail, not Mount Dora Jail.
Holding at Mount Dora Jail
Police department holding is short-term by design. Most arrestees brought to Mount Dora Jail are held only long enough for fingerprints, photographs, an inventory of personal property, and entry into the booking system. Holding can last a few hours to roughly 24 hours, depending on the time of arrest, court schedules, and intake capacity at the receiving jail. Late-night and weekend arrests often sit longer because court arraignments are limited to business hours and the transfer van may not run until morning. During this window, visitors are not permitted and phone calls may not yet be available.
Transfer to the County Jail
After initial processing at Mount Dora Jail, arrestees are transferred to the Lake County jail. The county jail handles longer-term pretrial detention, arraignment scheduling, bond intake, and any sentenced time served locally. Once the transfer is complete, the arrestee shows up in the county jail's inmate roster, becomes available for phone calls under the jail's contracted provider, and follows the county jail's visitation rules. To find the arrestee after transfer, use the InmateAid inmate search and look for the Lake County jail record. The county jail's facility page on InmateAid covers visitation, phone discount setup, and money transfer options once your person is in their system.
First Phone Call After Arrest
Arrestees at Mount Dora Jail may or may not receive a phone call during the brief holding period. Most jurisdictions allow at least one call after booking, but the timing depends on staffing, processing volume, and whether the call happens at Mount Dora Jail or after transfer to the county jail. The call is typically routed through the facility's contracted phone provider as a collect call or via a prepaid account. To make sure you don't miss the first call when it comes through, set up a prepaid account in advance through InmateAid's discount calling service.
Bail, Bond, and Release
Mount Dora Jail does not set bail. Bail is set by a judge at arraignment, which usually happens at the county courthouse after transfer to the Lake County jail. Minor misdemeanor arrests may qualify for cite-and-release at the scene or station-house release after booking at Mount Dora Jail, in which case the arrestee is released without ever going to county jail. Felony arrests and serious misdemeanors almost always go to the county jail to wait for arraignment, which can take hours, overnight, or until the next business day depending on when the arrest occurred. For specific bond information, contact the receiving county jail.
Visiting Someone Arrested by Mount Dora Jail
There is no visitation at Mount Dora Jail because the holding period is too short and the facility is not built for visitors. Once the arrestee is transferred to the Lake County jail, that facility's visitation rules apply, including approved visitor lists, scheduled visiting hours, ID requirements, and dress codes. To find the receiving facility and its visitation rules, search for the Lake County jail through the InmateAid inmate search and review the visitation section on that facility's page.
To confirm whether someone is still at Mount Dora Jail or has been transferred to the county jail, call 352-735-7130.