Greg Locke was booked at Wilson County Jail, released in six minutes, then denied being arrested
Pastor Greg Locke of Global Vision Bible Church in Lebanon, Tennessee, was booked into the Wilson County Jail on Tuesday, photographed for a mugshot, entered into jail records, and released on his own recognizance six minutes later. Then he went on Facebook and told his followers that none of it had happened.
Wilson County Sheriff's Office records show Locke was charged with a criminal misdemeanor for driving on a suspended or revoked license. His intake time was 12:52 p.m. By 12:58 p.m., he was out the door.
That evening, Locke posted on Facebook:
"To everyone jumping on a silly bandwagon, I did not get arrested today, or EVER. I went to the booking room voluntarily with my counsel because my license was unknowingly suspended over not sending in proof of insurance after I paid a ticket months ago."
He added that he has a court date on March 23rd to prove he had insurance and called the whole thing no big deal, The Christian Post reported. By Thursday, he was back online, declaring victory, saying he got his license reinstated "in less than 48 hours" and that "the horrific crime of insurance paperwork has been atoned for."
What "Voluntary" Actually Means in Tennessee Law
Locke's framing hinges on the word "voluntarily," as though walking into the booking room under your own power somehow negates the booking itself. The distinction doesn't hold up.
According to Ridings Law Group, a Tennessee legal practice:
"Many people think they have not been arrested if they get a citation. But this is incorrect. You actually 'have' been arrested. You have just not been physically taken to jail and booked. You get the citation because you qualify to book yourself later."
The firm explained that state criminal citations in Nashville mean law enforcement has charged you with a criminal offense, but, instead of physically arresting you, gives you a citation to book yourself and appear in court later. This process is "typically for less serious offenses, such as misdemeanors, infractions, or violations of local ordinances."
So Locke received a citation, turned himself in for the required booking and fingerprinting, was photographed for a mugshot, and was officially entered into jail records. Whether he drove himself there or was dragged in handcuffs changes the experience, not the legal reality.
The Pattern of Deflection
This is not the first time Locke has reframed unfavorable facts for his audience. The license suspension itself traces back to a Feb. 10 traffic stop at a gas station on South Mt. Juliet Road, where police discovered the suspension. That suspension is connected to a Lebanon city court case in April 2025 over proof of insurance.
Locke's defense is that he had insurance the entire time and simply failed to submit the paperwork. That may well be true. It may also be entirely beside the point. The state suspended his license. He drove on it. He got caught. He got charged. Those are the facts, and no amount of Facebook commentary about "silly busybodies" rewrites them.
The deeper issue isn't a paperwork snafu. It's the instinct to deny a verifiable public record to a loyal audience that trusts you. Locke didn't say, "I was technically arrested, but it's minor, and I'm handling it." He said, "I did not get arrested today, or EVER." The booking record says otherwise.
A Turbulent Season
The misdemeanor charge arrives during an already chaotic stretch for the outspoken pastor. On Sept. 3, 2024, Tyler Poole, 21, of Hermitage, reportedly blasted Locke's former home on Chandler Road in Mt. Juliet with more than 60 gunshots. In January, Poole pleaded guilty to one count of aggravated assault and two counts of reckless endangerment. He was sentenced to five years in prison on the aggravated assault charge, plus two years each for the reckless endangerment charges.
The Wilson County District Attorney's Office revealed the shooting stemmed from a dispute between Poole and Locke's 17-year-old stepson. Locke, in a statement to The Christian Post, pushed back on any suggestion the shooting wasn't connected to his ministry:
"It was my family and our home, so it had everything to do with me. I've never claimed it was over my preaching. I said, and still say, when you're making the devil angry, he fights you."
He also noted the gravity of the situation for his family:
"My kids could have died, so the WHY means absolutely nothing to me. It only means something to critics and liars looking for 15 minutes of fame."
No one should minimize what it means to have your home shot up. Sixty rounds fired at a house where children sleep is terrifying, regardless of the motive. That reality deserves acknowledgment.
Credibility Is the Currency
But credibility is the currency pastors trade in. When you tell your congregation that spiritual warfare explains every bad thing that happens to you, and then the District Attorney's office reveals the actual cause was a personal dispute involving your stepson, the narrative frays. When you tell your followers you were never arrested and the county jail has your mugshot, the narrative frays further.
None of this makes Locke a villain. A suspended license over insurance paperwork is genuinely minor. Most people would pay the fine, show up on March 23rd, and move on with their lives. The charge itself barely registers.
What registers is the denial. Pastors who build platforms on bold truth-telling cannot afford to be caught flatly contradicting public records. The standard isn't perfection. It's honesty. Locke's audience deserves the same straight talk he promises from the pulpit.
The booking record exists. Six minutes in the Wilson County Jail still counts.




