Divisions & Services | History | Meet the Sheriff | News
At the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office, our mission is to be the foundation on which everyone in Oklahoma County may thrive, by strengthening public trust and ensuring safe, secure environments through quality, professional law enforcement.
Finance Division | Investigations Division | Legal Counsel | Personnel Division | Property Division | Public Information Office
The Administrative Services Bureau, created in 1997, enhances the overall internal functions of the Sheriff's Office by streamlining services to create a more efficient and cost-effective operation. This bureau has the Divisions & Offices included on this page.
The Finance Division of the Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office is responsible for a wide variety of tasks. The primary responsibility of the Finance Division is to manage the day to day financial operations of the sheriff's office. This includes, but is not limited to:
In addition to the day to day responsibilities, the Finance Division oversees all contracts and contract negotiating for the sheriff's office. These include:
The fiscal financial year for the Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office starts July 1 and runs through June 30.
The Investigations Divisions primary duties are to conduct thorough follow-up investigations of crimes that occur within the primary jurisdiction of Oklahoma County. In addition the unit initiates new investigations based on criminal intelligence provided by deputies in the field and provide investigative assistance to other law enforcement agencies.
Personnel duties include:
View current employment opportunities here.
The Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office is deeply committed to the ideal of equality and non-discrimination among its employment, and retention policies. We seek to employ a representative cross-section of the community in which we live and serve. Oklahoma County is an Equal Employment Opportunity Employer and does not discriminate against persons on the basis of race, sex, color, national origin, religion, age, physical handicap, or veteran status.
The Property/Evidence Division is responsible for receiving, stocking, issuing and tracking all property that is necessary for the day to day operation of the Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office and the Oklahoma County Detention Center. These capital items include:
Email Property Division: property@oklahomacounty.org
The Evidence Section is responsible for accepting, storing, and maintaining the chain of custody of evidence that may be needed for prosecution of criminal cases.
Email Evidence: evidence@oklahomacounty.org
Aaron Brilbeck is the Public Information Officer for the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office. Mr. Brilbeck is a national award winning journalist who has worked for television and radio stations in New York; Ohio; Iowa and Oklahoma. He received a Bachelors Degree from the State University of New York at Potsdam. As the Public Information Officer, Mr. Brilbeck is responsible for:
Aaron Brilbeck Aaron.Brilbeck@oklahomacounty.org 2101 NE 36th Street Oklahoma City OK 73111
Finance Division
405-713-2012
Investigations Division
405-713-1017
Personnel Section
405-713-2040
Public Information Office
405-713-1029
Oklahoma Child Visitation Registry Act Exchanges at the Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office Sub-Station are between the hours of 10 am and 8 pm, Monday through Saturday. On Sundays, exchanges take place between 12 pm and 5 p.m. The Sheriff's Office requires a copy of your court order on file. The court order must be time and day specific to facilitate these exchanges.
Each party is expected to behave in a civil manner while making an exchange in the Sheriff's Office. It should be understood that we have a policy of "no tolerance" on this matter. Any other behavior will be dealt with accordingly. When making an exchange there will be a $2 fee per person, per exchange (exact amount, cash only), in accordance with state law. When paid, the Sheriff's Office will provide you with a receipt of the transaction. In accordance with state law, the Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office will furnish a registry sign-in sheet. The on-duty deputy will record the date, arrival time, departure time, your name, and phone number. According to state law, the Sheriff's Office will maintain the participant's record for three years. Copies of a participant's records shall be available at a cost of $1 per sheet. To help alleviate problems with the exchanges, the party responsible for delivering the child (children) must wait at the Sheriff's Office until the party receiving the child (children) has had reasonable time to leave the premises. Due to the schedule of the malls around the holidays, please check with us about our hours. Also in case of inclement weather, the malls may close early. Please call our office or mall customer service to check for early closings.
The Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office welcomes your input. Now you can submit your commendations and complaints by completing the form at the bottom of this page.
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>> OKLAHOMA COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE COMMUNITY ADVISORY BOARD - Download Application
The mission of the Oklahoma County Sheriff Office’s Community Advisory Board (CAB) is to develop and maintain a partnership between the community and the Sheriff’s Office. The CAB aims to reduce crime and to enhance the quality of life for all citizens through positive and open communication. The CAB is being created to facilitate interactions between the Sheriff’s Office and a committee of diverse citizens, derived from a cross section of citizens within Oklahoma County. The CAB will assist the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office in establishing the highest standards for accountability with the goal of showcasing the myriad of efforts undertaken by the Sheriff’s Office and increasing the public’s trust.
In an effort to strengthen relationships between the Sheriff’s Office and community members, the parties created the CAB. The role of the CAB will be to improve communication between citizens and the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office. The CAB will provide comments and recommendations to the Sheriff on office policies and procedures to ensure best practices are in place and operational. The philosophy of community policing begins with the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office providing quality detention services and policing in direct partnership with the citizens they serve. In order to achieve this goal, there must be an open flow of communication, information, and ideas between the community and the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office.
APPLICATION WINDOW - Download Applications
Applications will be accepted from April 8 through close of business on May 24, 2019.
You can pick up and return completed applications at any Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office location:
Applications are also available on the following websites: https://sheriff.oklahomacounty.org/243/Community-Advisory-Board, or www.voiceokc.org. Completed applications can be electronically submitted for consideration to okcosopio@gmail.com. Completed applications may also be submitted to our community outreach partner VOICE:
VOICE P.O. Box 881 Oklahoma City, OK 73101
VOICE
P.O. Box 881 Oklahoma City, OK 73101
Meet Deputy Brisco
Deputy Brisco is a mascot on a mission.
Deputy Brisco is the official mascot of the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office. His story, specifically how he got his name is quite unique. In November of 2007 the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office lost a K9 by the name of Brisco, the dog died in the line of duty while pursuing a suspect just off of Interstate-35 & Interstate-44 in Oklahoma City, his story has been memorialized on the Oklahoma Law Enforcement Memorial. To honor K9 Brisco’s in the line of duty death, we chose to name our mascot after him. Deputy Brisco serves as a comcommunity service representative, and you can often find him at parades, school events, and any number of community events representing the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office. If you would like to request Deputy Brisco for community events, please call to schedule.
Deputy Brisco Mascot 405-713-1038
Administrative Bureau | Judicial Bureau | Operations Bureau | Support Bureau
The Administrative Services Bureau, created in 1997, enhances the overall internal functions of the Sheriff’s Office by streamlining services to create a more efficient and cost-effective operation. The Administrative Services Bureau is comprised of the following Divisions.
The Judicial Bureau’s primary duties include serving criminal warrants, subpoenas, civil process, victim protection orders, evictions, lock-outs, and lawsuit summons. The Judicial Bureau is comprised of the following Divisions.
Dispatch Center
405-869-2501
General Information
405-713-1000
Judicial Bureau
405-713-1034
Most Wanted
405-713-1968
Records & Warrants
The Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office Operations Bureau (a.k.a. Field Services Division) is responsible for several unique functions. The men and women of this division have direct contact with the public on a daily basis. The Operations Bureau is comprised of the following Divisions.
Communications Division
Community Services
405-869-2567
Honor Guard
405-869-2531
K-9 Division
405-869-2522
Patrol Division
Reserve Division
Sheriff Sales
405-713-1056
Traffic Safety Division
Training Division
405-713-2033
The Support Bureau of the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office offers several functions to the agency. Primarily employees in this division tend to the daily upkeep of the facilities, and technical aspects of the sheriff’s office. The Support Bureau is comprised of the following Divisions.
Facilities Division
405-713-1966
Fleet Division
405-869-2540
Preparedness Division
405-713-1086
TRIAD
405-713-1950
Court Process Division | FAQ's | Protective Services | Warrant Squad
The Judicial Bureau holds court ordered property sales which can prove to be a financial windfall for buying citizens. Judicial Bureau deputies often travel long distances across Oklahoma and the U.S. to extradite inmates back to Oklahoma County. To help cut down the costs of these trips the Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office has a contract agreement with a private transportation company to extradite out of state inmates, this helps cut the county's costs by up to 50% each trip. The Judicial Bureau combines the following units that work directly with the district courts and handle most of the court orders which are processed.
The Court Process Division is the chief enforcement arm for the Circuit Court of Oklahoma County and is responsible for the processing, service, and enforcement of court orders. We are located at:
2101 N.E. 36th Street Oklahoma City. OK 73111
The fee is $50. If you have any questions please call 405-713-1034, Monday thru Friday between 8 am and 5 pm (CST).
Sheriff Tommie Johnson III - Attention Judicial Services - 2101 NE 36th Street, Oklahoma City, OK 73111
VPOs are filed through the Oklahoma County Court Clerk’s office located at: 320 Robert S Kerr Ave, Oklahoma City, OK 73102. Questions can be answered by calling 405-713-1735.
Call 405-713-1034 to check for service status.
There are no initial charges for filing the order. Court fees, if any, are assessed by the judge at the hearing.
For a full description of the Oklahoma Landlord and Tenant Act go to the Oklahoma State Court Network website.
Under normal circumstances we return in 48 hours to execute the lockout.
This branch of the Judicial Services Bureau is supervised by Captain Melissa Abernathy and is comprised of two lieutenants, six sergeants, thirty-eight deputies, five detention officers and two clericals. Nineteen deputies are assigned to a newly installed 1.1 million dollar courthouse complex security system activated April 1, 2007. Twenty deputies are assigned to service the district and juvenile courts while eight deputies are assigned to transportation.
The new security system has screened in excess of 300,000 items and individuals in the first three months of existence. This new state of the art system is a major factor in the effort by Sheriff Johnson to maintain a safe workplace for all County employees and visitors to the Oklahoma County Courthouse Complex.
Seventeen deputies and four detention officers are charged with the safe keeping of individuals brought to the court holding facility from the detention center. The number of individuals may range from as few as 25 to as many as 200 and are the primary responsibility of four detention officers. One detention officer is charged with the duty of processing, which includes photographing and fingerprinting, committed individuals from the courts. The Protective Services transportation unit is responsible for transporting approximately 2,000 inmates per month to and from the detention center for various court appearances and another 200 inmates per week transported to the Department of Corrections. This unit is also charged with the responsibility of transporting inmates to and from the doctor/hospital on medical situations.
Summarily, these four units are responsible for the safe and secure transportation of all inmates moved from the detention center to any location for court proceedings and to the Department of Corrections to serve state time. They are also responsible for the safe keeping of the Courts, County personnel and visitors to the Oklahoma County Courthouse Complex.
The Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office is responsible for all arrest warrants filed in Oklahoma County. The Oklahoma County Warrant Unit was implemented in 1997 and deputies assigned to this unit work around the clock searching for fugitives with outstanding warrants. The Warrant Unit is often referred to as the "Fugitive Squad" and these deputies have been responsible for arresting thousands of Oklahoma County's most dangerous criminals.
*Tips can be made by anonymously filling out the Tipline form within the Tipline section.
Warrant Squad
2101 NE 36th Street Oklahoma City, OK 73111
*If you know someone with an active warrant or have information about a fugitive please contact the Fugitive Hotline: 405-713-1968.
Click the link to begin using the Law Enforcement Search function.
Welcome to the Oklahoma Law Enforcement Technology portal. On this page you will learn how to sign up for MobileCOP, as well as receive support and training for existing users.
Must have items:
Computer Options:
Paperwork (Completed by agency head):
Oklahoma Mobile agencies needing replacement computers loaded or needing new license hosted from the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office system should email OKMobile@caliberpublicsafety.com.
Details to include in email:
Once this is received you will receive a quote for the install services at a minimal rate per device. This rate will only apply to agencies who are current on software maintenance with Caliber.
If you have additional questions, you may contact OKMobile@caliberpublicsafety.com
OLETS has modified the enrollment process for MobileCOP training. You MUST obtain your OLETS UserID FIRST, before enrolling below. To obtain an OLETS UserID please contact your local dispatcher. Your dispatcher has been given directions (see below) for beginning the enrollment process. Once ALL of the below steps are completed THEN you may use our form below to enroll for the monthly MobileCOP training. If you do not have an OLETS UserID before registering you will be un-enrolled from class, until you obtain this UserID.
TO: ALL STATIONS
REF: NEW OLETS USER LOGIN REQUEST – MANAGEMENT FORMS
EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY, OLETS HAS CREATED TWO NEW FORMS ON THE OLETS TERMINALS TO ASSIST ALL AGENCIES WITH THE MANDATORY INFORMATION NEEDED TO OBTAIN A NEW OLETS USER LOGIN.
THESE FORMS WILL BE LISTED UNDER FORMS – ADMINISTRATIVE MESSAGES – OLETS.
THE FORMS ARE: OK COUNTY MOBILE COP USER REQUEST (MCOP) – THIS FORM WILL BE USED WHEN YOU ARE ONLY REQUESTING A NEW USER LOGIN FOR OLETS ACCESS IN MOBILE COP.
IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS, PLEASE CONTACT THE OLETS NETWORK CENTER.
AUTH: OLETS NETWORK CENTER
Any personnel arriving at class whom have NOT completed the OLETS enrollment form listed above we will NOT be able or allowed to train for class that day. NO WALK-INS will be allowed to attend training.
Please contact the OLETS network center (405) 425-2341 if you have any questions or problems obtaining an OLETS ID and/or reactivating an OLETS ID. If you have any concerns or questions about this process please contact our helpdesk at (405) 418-6267
Below are the current dates for registration of the upcoming MobileCOP training. Click on the link below to be taken to the registration form.
Click here to register for MobileCOP training – Oklahoma City Metro
COMIT | Communications | Community | Directory | Honor Guard | K9 Division | Patrol | Reserve | Special Teams | Traffic Safety | Training
The Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office Field Services Division is responsible for several unique functions. The men and women who comprise this division have direct contact with the public on a daily basis. For unit contact information scroll to the bottom of this page, or view the Operations Directory below.
Central Oklahoma Metro Interdiction Team (a.k.a. COMIT), is a joint task force between the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office, the Oklahoma County District Attorney’s Office, and the Oklahoma City Police Department. COMIT is tasked with getting dangerous drugs off of the streets.
The Communications Division is the life line for all field deputies. Nine municipalities also rely on our communications division for dispatch services to their police officers and firefighters. If you make a 9-1-1 call on accident, please stay on the phone and allow the communications specialists to confirm your information, do not hang up. If our dispatchers can’t determine that an emergency exists they will dispatch all services to your address. We realize that accidental 911 calls will be made. If a child is found to be playing with the telephone and calls 911 a deputy may be dispatched to the address to speak with the child about the seriousness of tying up emergency services.
The Community Services / Crime Prevention Division works towards building relationships and safer communities by delivering information and addressing concerns with our community partners. The Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office provides a variety of services to outside law enforcement agencies as well as community organizations. The goal of these services which also includes public safety, and crime prevention lectures is to enhance the all around safety and security of the residents of Oklahoma County.
The Community Services/Crime Prevention Division currently has several community outreach programs that include:
For more information call 405-869-2567.
The Honor Guard represents the honor and professionalism of the sheriff’s office. They are called upon by organizations and other agencies throughout the state to perform duties such as posting the colors to honoring a fallen deputy or officer. In November 2002 the Honor Guard grew from 12 to 25 full-time and reserve deputies. A new training program was added as well as a shotgun to honor fallen deputies with a 21-gun salute.
The K-9 Unit specializes in training dogs to apprehend criminals by using non-lethal tactics. The team of handlers and dogs are certified in narcotics, and explosives detection. The unit participates in demonstrations, drug awareness education, and provides assistance to other law enforcement agencies in Oklahoma County.
The largest field division in the Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office, the Patrol Division is responsible for patrolling 720 square miles, and protecting nearly 700,000 citizens in Oklahoma County. As a result of the Patrol Division a statistical fact shows that since 1997 crime is down by 85% in the unincorporated areas of Oklahoma County.
The mission of the patrol division is to provide quality law enforcement services to the citizens of Oklahoma County as well as provide assistance to smaller municipalities within the county, and to assist the Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services. The 26 member Patrol Division offers specialty services such as traffic safety and crime prevention patrols.
As a result of traffic safety initiatives which include safety checkpoints and seat belt enforcement traffic crashes have been reduced by 73%.
The Reserve Division consists of nearly 200 volunteer members. The sheriff requires all reserve deputies be active and well trained. The Reserve Division has undergone extensive restructuring Captain Absher and Sgt. Wood have been appointed to coordinate the program to ensure professional conduct. Each reserve deputy is required to work a minimum of 16 hours a month, attend a basic law enforcement academy, and attend annual refresher training. The Reserve Division is now one of the most active divisions within the agency in providing law enforcement services to our citizens, donating millions of dollars worth of time to the citizens of Oklahoma County.
The Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office Special Teams includes the Bomb Squad, and Tactical Teams.
The Bomb Squad is accredited by the Federal Bureau of Investigations, and is a highly trained team which responds to explosives related incidents throughout Oklahoma County. The team is made up of full-time, and reserve deputies. The squad has two certified hazardous devices technicians. Members of the team have received training in:
The Bomb Squad also has 2 canines that are trained to "sniff" out explosive devices. The Oklahoma County Bomb Squad responds to an average of 50 emergency calls per year.
The Oklahoma Multi-Jurisdictional Tactical Unit is comprised of 35 Deputies and Officers from the OCSO as well as Moore, Bethany, OU Health Science Center, and the Village Police Departments. This unit is trained to respond to high risk critical incidents including:
The Tactical Unit is staffed with:
The unit is well equipped with a wide variety of tools and equipment that when used by skilled personnel drastically reduce the likelihood of a deadly encounter while dealing with a criminal or person in the throes of a mental health episode.
The Traffic Safety Unit is made up of deputies whose mission is to save lives and protect the motoring public within Oklahoma County through a combination of rigorous traffic enforcement and public education. Working in partnerships with the Oklahoma Highway Safety Office and surrounding agencies, the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office Traffic Unit participates in local, state and national traffic enforcement campaigns. The traffic unit is made up with eight motorcycle deputies, a specialized fatality crash investigation squad, and an educational law enforcement liaison assigned to the Oklahoma Highway Safety Office. In conjunction with enforcing state traffic laws, the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office Traffic Unit is aggressively making attempts to reverse the deadly trend of impaired driving by conducting sobriety checkpoints and DUI saturation patrol across Oklahoma County.
The Oklahoma County Sheriff's Training Division provides basic training as well as in-service continuing education for our 250 full-time deputies, nearly 200 reserve deputies, and 400 detention officers. The 8 members of the training staff are assisted by other deputies and detention officers to accomplish this task as efficiently as possible.
Sheriff Johnson's dedication to law enforcement education has been proven time and time again by his willingness to allow law enforcement officers from other agencies to take advantage of our classes and training events at no charge. All Oklahoma County deputies attend a law enforcement mini academy each year to meet the state mandated training requirements set forth by the Counsel on Law Enforcement Education and Training (CLEET).
8029 SE 29th Oklahoma City, OK 73110
12777 N. Rockwell Ave. Northwest Hall Oklahoma City, OK 73142
Reserves Application
Special Teams
Bomb Squad & Tactical Units
2101 N.E. 36th Street Oklahoma City, OK 73111
Fees Exact Amount Cash for the Following Services
*Can be in Cash, Money Order, or Cashier’s Check
*Can be Money Order or Cashier’s Check ONLY
Our agency is pleased to provide OffenderWatch® for the citizens of Oklahoma County. OffenderWatch® is the nation’s leading registered sex offender management and community notification tool with hundreds of leading agencies in dozens of states utilizing it. Oklahoma County’s law enforcement utilizes OffenderWatch® to manage and monitor the whereabouts, conduct and compliance status of the registered offenders in Oklahoma County. OffenderWatch® provides the most accurate and timely information available and now this information is available to you! OffenderWatch® is updated instantaneously throughout the day as offender addresses and other offender information is updated in our office. You may enter any address in the county and see real-time information on the publishable offenders within the specified radius of the address you enter. Offenders move frequently, so instead of having to check the maps on a weekly basis, the best way to stay informed is to take advantage of our free email alert system. You may confidentially register as many addresses in the county as you wish, and we will continuously monitor the addresses and send you an email alert if a new offender registers an address within one mile of any address you register. There is no cost for this service and no limit to the number of addresses you can register – your email address and physical addresses are all confidential. Tell your friends and neighbors and be sure to register your home, school, work, gym, day care, park, soccer field, parents or children’s homes – any address of interest to you!
For information regarding sex and violent offender registration, contact the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office at 405-713-2042.
The Oklahoma County Sheriff Foreclosure Sale is published monthly for two consecutive weeks at least thirty days prior to the date of sale. The foreclosed properties are published in local newspapers in which the property is located. The public may also buy property sale lists for $4.00 at the Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office Civil Division located at 2101 NE 36th Street, Oklahoma City, OK 73111. View published foreclosure listings here.
Click here to view the Sales Registration page.
The Sheriff's Foreclosure Sales will be conducted at 4205 N Lincoln Blvd (North entrance) at 10 am on one Tuesday per month. Registration will open at 9:00 am. DO NOT enter the building until we open the door. There will be NO re-entry, doors lock at 10 am. The schedule is subject to change due to weather and holidays.
Parking
There are only 6 handicapped parking spots available, so it's first come first parked in the handicapped parking spots. ALL other parking HAS TO BE in Tier 2 and 3 for the Sheriff's sale. All other parking is assigned for ACOG & Election Board employee parking. Violation of parking will be checked and could cause a violator's vehicle to be towed.
To contact Oklahoma County's civil team, please contact Kim Gennings at (405) 713-1056 or via e-mail at kim.gennings@oklahomacounty.org.
To print the list of properties in the Sheriff’s Foreclosure Sale for this month, you will need to click on the listings and then change your browser’s page setup to landscape view. To view the listings click here. For instructions on how to print, please click here.
View the Sheriff's foreclosure sales listings.
Facilities Division | Fleet Division | Preparedness Division
The Support Bureau of the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office offers several functions to the agency. Primarily employees in this division tend to the daily upkeep of the facilities, and technical aspects of the sheriff’s office.
The Facilities Division maintains the buildings and grounds of the Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office. Employees service the jail in a number of ways:
Facility employees also work with inmates through our Trustee Program, a work release program that allows inmates to perform maintenance duties around county properties to reduce their sentences.
201 N Shartel Avenue Oklahoma City, OK 73102
The Fleet Division of the Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office is responsible for overseeing and maintaining the condition of over 350 pieces of equipment. This equipment ranges from:
In addition to performing routine services on the equipment, they also install and perform minor repair of public safety equipment in the units used for law enforcement. Finally, they provide these same services to other county governmental agencies as well as several municipalities within the county. During times of extended incidents or natural disasters, they provide logistical/equipment support to other bureaus within the Sheriff's Office or to other agencies that may need assistance.
The Office of Preparedness is tasked with making sure the Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office is capable of responding to significant events within our jurisdiction.
The Office of Preparedness specifically coordinates response for the sheriff's office related to natural and man made disasters.
The Office of Preparedness is a diverse, well trained division which we strongly depend on to help our citizens during times of crisis.
The Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office welcomes your help in fighting crime. Now you can submit tips online to help catch criminals. Fill out the information in the form below and click submit to send your tip the Sheriff’s Office. Fill in the required fields with the proper information. In the description field give detailed information relating to the crime you are reporting including location of crime, time of day, vehicle tag number, and description of person(s) involved. If the crime reported is not within the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s Office jurisdiction we will forward the information to the appropriate agency.
*Anonymous Tips: call the Warrant Squad at 405-713-1968.
*Fugitive Hotline: call 405-713-1968 if you know someone with an active warrant or have information about a fugitive.
To submit a tip, please complete the form at the bottom of this page.
Sheriff Tommie Johnson III is committed to keeping our senior citizens up-to-date on current crime trends and safety concerns. TRIAD is a collaborative effort between the Sheriff's office, local police departments and senior citizens working together to reduce and prevent crimes against seniors. Our TRIAD program in Oklahoma County was established in 1996, and in the years since its creation has developed and consistently maintained interactive programs in several of our local communities. Our membership grows each and every year, and we look forward to reaching more areas of the county in the years to come.
SALT Councils are groups which carry out the TRIAD activities. Our goal is to educate senior citizens on crimes directed at their age group and how to protect themselves by offering free classes throughout the county. We currently have twenty active SA.L.T.’s and are looking to start even more. SA.L.T. Councils are currently active in the following communities:
KTOK 1000 and Well Preserved with Eunice Khoury is directed to everything Senior Adults need to know. Eunice regularly airs TRIAD eventsas well as prevention messages each and every week called the TRIAD/Well Preserved Senior Safety Tip of the Week. . Eunice also honors seniors who go above and beyond in their life with a “Senior Salute” on air. *Tune in each Saturday morning at 0900 or catch the recorded broadcast on her web page website.
Each year, the TRIAD program hosts several activities and makes available several programs for our older adults. A few of these activities are:
TRIAD Coordinator
For more information on the Oklahoma County TRIAD Program, SALT Councils, to schedule a speaker, or to add your name to our mailing list for upcoming events, please contact the Triad Coordinator.
2101 NE 36th Street Oklahoma City, OK 73111 405-713-1086
View Warrant Search.
Email the Sheriff
Sheriff Tommie Johnson III is an Oklahoma City native; a decorated law enforcement professional and experienced leader. The son of a grocery store butcher, Johnson attended Oklahoma City Public Schools his entire life. He went to Hillcrest Elementary; Northeast Middle School; and graduated from U.S. Grant High School where he and his wife, Amanda, were classmates.
Sheriff Johnson was elected to office in 2020, and brought with him a long list of proposed changes he wanted to see implemented under his leadership. ALL of those changes were put into place in the first year, dramatically improving the efficiency of the Oklahoma County Sheriff’s office; morale among staff and the relationship with the community we serve.
Among Sheriff Johnson’s long list of accomplishments:
Sheriff Johnson began his law enforcement career with the University of Oklahoma Police Department. In 2015, he joined the Norman Police Department, where he was promoted to the rank of Master Police Officer and honored with the City of Norman Police Department’s Centennial Award and the Department’s lifesaving award.
With a heart for kids, Johnson has been a leader on school safety issues. In 2019, he testified before a Capitol committee in support of school safety legislation, and he appeared in a safety video produced by the State Department of Education. He serves as a youth sports coach and regularly volunteers as a mentor for at risk kids in local elementary schools, where he tries to be a positive male influence in the lives of young boys.
Johnson grew up in Antioch Baptist Church and is now a member of Life Church, both in Oklahoma City. He and his wife, Amanda have been married since 2014 and have three sons and a daughter.
The Office of Sheriff is one of antiquity. It is the oldest law enforcement office known within the common-law system and it has always been accorded great dignity and high trust. For the most part, the Office of Sheriff evolved out of necessity. Were it not for laws which require enforcing, there would have been no necessity for the Sheriff. There would have been no need for the development of police administration, criminology, criminalists, etc. This is not the case, however. Man learned quite early that all is not orderly in the universe. All times and all places have generated those who covet the property of their neighbors and who are willing to expropriate this property by any means. As such, man's quest for equity and order gave birth to the Office of Sheriff, the history of which begins in the Old Testament and continues through the annals of Judeo-Christian tradition. Indeed, there is no honorable law enforcement authority in Anglo-American law so ancient as that of the County Sheriff. And today, as in the past, the County Sheriff is a peace officer entrusted with the maintenance of law and order and the preservation of domestic tranquility.
The Office of Sheriff and the law enforcement, judicial and correctional functions he performs are more than 1,000 years old. The Office of Sheriff dates back at least to the reign of Alfred the Great of England, and some scholars even argue that the Office of Sheriff was first created during the Roman occupation of England. Around 500 AD, Germanic tribes from Europe (called the Anglo-Saxons) began an invasion of Celtic England which eventually led over the centuries to the consolidation of Anglo-Saxon England as a unified kingdom under Alfred the Great late in the 9th Century. Alfred divided England into geographic units called "shires," or counties. In 1066, William the Conqueror defeated the Anglo-Saxons and instituted his own Norman government in England. Both under the Anglo-Saxons and under the Normans, the King of England appointed a representative called a "reeve" to act on behalf of the king in each shire or county. The "shire-reeve" or King's representative in each county became the "Sheriff" as the English language changed over the years. The shire-reeve or Sheriff was the chief law enforcement officer of each county in the year 1000 AD. He still has the same function in Oklahoma in the year 2000 AD. Oklahoma's first constitution, adopted in July 1907, created the Office of Sheriff as an elected official in each county. The concepts of "county" and "Sheriff" were essentially the same as they had been during the previous 900 years of English legal history. Because of the English heritage of the American colonies, the new United States adopted the English law and legal institutions as its owner.
Oklahoma's constitution has been revised several times through the years, but the constitutional provisions establishing the Office of Sheriff remains the same as it was in 1907, which, in turn, is strikingly similar to the functioning of the Office of Sheriff at the time of Alfred the Great and William the Conqueror. The major difference, of course, is that the Kings of England appointed their Sheriffs. From the earliest times in America, our Sheriffs have been elected by the people to serve as the principal law enforcement officer of each county. Oklahoma County marks its beginnings with Oklahoma Territory. It was one of the first 7 counties of Oklahoma, organized under the Organic Act passed by Congress on May 2, 1890. It was designated County Number 2 until voters named it Oklahoma County.
There have been 22 Sheriff’s of Oklahoma County. The first Sheriff was C.H. DeFord who took office on June 30, 1890, and served for 19 months through January 1892. The average length of service of all Sheriff's of Oklahoma County has been 5 years, with the longest being almost 26 years and the shortest 1 month. Clearly, the Sheriff is the only viable officer remaining of the ancient offices, and his contemporary responsibility as conservator of the peace has been influenced greatly by modern society. As the crossbow gave way to the primitive flintlock, the Sheriff is not unaccustomed to change. But now, perhaps more than ever before in history, law enforcement if faced with complex, moving, rapid changes in methodology, technology, and social attitudes. As Thomas Jefferson wrote in his The Value of Constitutions, "the Office of Sheriff is the most important of all the executive offices of the county."
Tommie Johnson III Sheriff
2101 NE 36th St Oklahoma City, OK 73111