
The Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office has rolled out two new online tools that put active warrants and missing-person cases a click away for anyone in Duval County. Hot on the heels of its Unsolved Crimes hub, the agency is now bundling photos, last-seen details and easy tip forms in one place so neighbors can help spot people of interest and move investigations along faster.
Where to Find the New Pages
The new pages live on the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office website. The wanted list is posted at Jacksonville Sheriff's Office (wanted.jaxsheriff.org), and the missing-person profiles are collected at Jacksonville Sheriff's Office (missingperson.jaxsheriff.org).
The Wanted list features people with active warrants. Current entries include names such as Matthew Obrian Smith, Priscilla Carol Holland and Dynajah Nicole Williams. The Missing Persons page carries profiles like Carly Elizabeth Tillery and Olivia Jordan Sumner, along with last-seen dates and descriptive details meant to jog memories.
Every listing comes with a built-in form so visitors can submit a tip straight to investigators without hunting for a separate phone number or email address. JSO says both pages will be updated as cases develop and as new names are added or cleared.
Early Results and What Officials Say
JSO is betting on these new hubs because the formula has already worked once. The sites build on the momentum of the Unsolved Crimes page, which has quietly turned computer time into case leads. As reported by News4JAX, the agency told reporters the unsolved page "has generated more than 700 tips and identified more than 600 suspects."
The outlet also notes the Missing Persons page, created this year with about 50 entries, has already helped bring "more than a dozen" people home safely. Director of Patrol and Enforcement Mark Romano told the station the office plans to highlight those wins and credit the people who spoke up, saying, "We're going to put you on our page and we're going to ask the community for their help." Romano added, "Since March, we've recovered 17 of these people."
Why the Approach Works
The digital-first strategy began in 2023 with the Unsolved Crimes page, which was designed to turn surveillance stills into community-generated leads instead of dusty evidence files. Action News Jax reported the original page went live with roughly 100 cases and encouraged residents to scroll through images and send in anything that looked familiar.
JSO officials say centralizing photos and case details online makes it easier for people to recognize someone they have seen around the neighborhood and for detectives to act quickly on time-sensitive tips. Instead of a flier taped to a window or a one-off TV segment, the pages give cases a permanent home that anyone can check on their phone.
How to Pass Along Tips
Each case listing includes a tip form tied directly to that person’s profile so users can flag what they know without worrying about which detective to call. Residents can also contact the Sheriff’s Office through its non-emergency line or send anonymous information through Crime Stoppers.
The phone number for anonymous tips is listed as 1-866-845-TIPS, per News4JAX, and the online pages accept uploads and comments attached to specific cases. Romano said the office plans to post booking photos next to solved entries so the public can literally see how their tips turned into arrests, a bit of visual feedback he described as part of showing residents the value of their help.
Sheriff’s Office leaders say they also hope the added visibility will work as a quiet deterrent, making repeat offenders think twice about circling back to the same streets when their faces can be searched in a few keystrokes. For now, the new webpages give Jacksonville residents a clearer window into ongoing investigations and a direct line to the detectives working them. Anyone with information is urged to use the case forms on the sites or call the non-emergency number listed on the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office page.









