Owasso Booking Releases
Owasso booking releases are processed by the Owasso Police Department for city-level offenses and the Tulsa County Sheriff's Office for felony charges. Owasso is in Tulsa County, so people arrested on serious charges end up at the David L. Moss Criminal Justice Center in Tulsa. You can search for booking records through the state court system, the county jail search, or by contacting the Owasso PD directly. These records are public under Oklahoma law. Anyone can request them without having to give a reason.
Owasso Overview
Owasso Police Arrest Records
The Owasso Police Department makes arrests within the city limits and creates booking records for each person taken into custody. The records include the standard details: name, date of birth, charges, and arrest date. These are public records under the Oklahoma Open Records Act, and you can request copies from the police department.
Owasso is a growing city just north of Tulsa. The police department handles everything from traffic enforcement to more serious crimes. When a misdemeanor arrest happens in Owasso, the booking stays at the city level and the case goes through the Owasso Municipal Court. For felonies, the person is transferred to Tulsa County custody.
To get Owasso booking releases from the police department, you can visit the station, call, or submit a written request. Staff process records requests during business hours and charge a small fee for copies. You have the right to inspect booking logs at no cost. The department must comply with state open records law, which covers all law enforcement booking data and arrest reports.
If you need to check on a recent Owasso arrest, calling the police department is the quickest option. They can confirm whether someone was booked and tell you where the case stands.
David L. Moss Criminal Justice Center
Owasso sits in Tulsa County. People arrested in Owasso on felony charges get sent to the David L. Moss Criminal Justice Center in Tulsa. This is the main county jail for the Tulsa County area and handles a large volume of bookings from cities throughout the county, including Owasso, Broken Arrow, Bixby, and Jenks.
The Tulsa County Sheriff's Office runs the jail and maintains records of every booking and release. You can search for inmates by name to see if they are currently in custody. The search shows charges, booking date, and bond info. This tool covers all bookings at the facility, regardless of which city made the arrest. If someone from Owasso was booked on a felony, this is where that record lives.
For Owasso residents, the split between city and county bookings is important. Misdemeanors stay local. Felonies go to Tulsa County. Knowing which one applies helps you figure out where to look for the booking record you need.
The image shows one of the statewide tools available for searching booking releases and court records connected to Owasso arrests.
Note: The David L. Moss facility is one of the busiest jails in the state, so records may take a few hours to appear online after a booking.
Owasso Court Case Search
Misdemeanor cases from Owasso go through the Owasso Municipal Court. The court handles city ordinance violations and minor criminal charges. You can contact the court for case information, hearing dates, and outcomes. The court keeps records of every case that started with an Owasso police arrest and stayed at the municipal level.
Felony cases from Owasso move to the Tulsa County District Court. You can search those cases for free on the Oklahoma State Courts Network. Select Tulsa County and type in the name you want. OSCN shows party names, docket entries, attorneys, and case status. The system is free, requires no account, and has records going back to the 1990s. It covers all 77 counties.
If you need documents from the case file, you may need to contact the Tulsa County Court Clerk directly. OSCN shows docket information, but the actual filed documents are only available through the clerk's office or through On Demand Court Records, which charges a small fee per document.
Owasso Booking Records and Oklahoma Law
Booking releases in Owasso are public under the Oklahoma Open Records Act, Title 51 of the Oklahoma Statutes. Section 24A.8 states that arrest records, booking data, and jail registers must be available for public inspection. This applies to the Owasso Police Department, the Tulsa County Sheriff, and all other agencies that hold these records.
You do not have to explain why you want the records. Agencies can charge for copies but not for viewing. If you are denied access, the Oklahoma Attorney General enforces compliance with the open records law. Medical and mental health data may be withheld, but the core booking facts are always public.
The VINE notification system is another tool for tracking Owasso booking releases. It sends free alerts when an offender's custody status changes. You can also use the DOC offender search to find people sentenced to state prison after an Owasso arrest.
Tulsa County Booking Releases
Owasso is part of Tulsa County, and felony booking releases from the city go through the county system. The David L. Moss Criminal Justice Center and the Tulsa County District Court handle serious cases from across the county. For full details on county resources, visit the Tulsa County page.