Kingfisher County Traffic Court Records
Kingfisher County traffic court records are maintained by the District Court Clerk in Kingfisher, Oklahoma. Citations issued in the county by the Oklahoma Highway Patrol or the county sheriff go through the District Court and become public records. You can search them online through ODCR with court code 037 or use the OSCN docket system. The clerk's office at PO Box 328 in Kingfisher can also help you find a case, request copies, or confirm a hearing date.
Kingfisher County Overview
Kingfisher County District Court Clerk
Lauren Stroh is the Kingfisher County Court Clerk. The mailing address is PO Box 328, Kingfisher, OK 73750. Call the office at 405-375-3813 to reach staff during business hours. More information about the clerk's office and county resources is at kingfisher.okcounties.org/offices/court-clerk. The clerk handles all District Court records for Kingfisher County, including traffic court records, civil filings, and criminal case files.
All traffic citations written in Kingfisher County by OHP troopers or county deputies are filed with this office. The clerk assigns each case a docket number, records all filings, schedules hearings, and tracks payments and judgments. These records are public from the day of filing. You do not need to be a party to a case to request basic information about it. Anyone can ask to see a docket entry or request a copy of a public document.
| Court Clerk | Lauren Stroh |
|---|---|
| Mailing Address | PO Box 328, Kingfisher, OK 73750 |
| Phone | 405-375-3813 |
| Website | kingfisher.okcounties.org/offices/court-clerk |
| ODCR Court Code | 037 |
Search Kingfisher County Traffic Records Online
On Demand Court Records (ODCR) is the first place to check for Kingfisher County traffic court records. Enter court code 037 to filter to this county and search by name or case number. ODCR shows docket activity, hearing dates, and fine amounts for most traffic cases filed in the District Court. The system is free and available around the clock. Cases typically appear in the system within a day or two of filing.
The Oklahoma State Courts Network (OSCN) at oscn.net/dockets provides a second free search path. OSCN covers all Oklahoma counties. If you want to check for court activity across multiple counties or verify a case that does not appear in ODCR, OSCN is worth checking as well. The two systems pull from similar sources, so most cases appear in both.
The Kingfisher County court clerk page at okcounties.org is shown below, providing contact information and office details.
The official Kingfisher County court clerk page at kingfisher.okcounties.org is the starting point for confirming office hours and other clerk contact details before visiting or calling.
The OKCountyRecords portal for Kingfisher County is shown below, covering public land and property records.
OKCountyRecords for Kingfisher County covers property filings and related public documents alongside the court search tools available through ODCR and OSCN.
For online fine payments, the OSCN E-Payments portal handles eligible Kingfisher County District Court cases. Confirm your case number in ODCR before using E-Payments, then check whether your citation qualifies for online payment. When it does, you can pay without driving to the courthouse.
Kingfisher County Traffic Court Records and Case Flow
Traffic citations in Kingfisher County follow a clear path. An officer issues the citation, submits it to the clerk's office, and a case is opened. That case becomes public record. You can find it in ODCR with court code 037 or search OSCN by name. Both systems show docket activity, but to get actual documents you need to contact the clerk.
When you get a ticket in Kingfisher County, you have a few realistic options. The simplest is to pay the fine. That closes the case, but it enters a conviction on your record and adds points through Oklahoma's point system, which is managed by the Department of Public Safety. DPS tracks those points and can suspend a license when they reach 10 within five years. A second option is to appear in court and contest the charge. If the officer does not show, or your argument holds up, the case may be dismissed. A third option is asking about a deferred sentence, which is available for some violations and can keep a conviction off the permanent record if you meet the terms the court sets.
Under Oklahoma Title 47, fines double in school and construction zones. That rule applies to Kingfisher County just as it does across the state. Check your docket entry in ODCR to see the listed fine before you respond to the citation. Construction zones along state highways running through the county are common spots where the doubled fine rule applies.
Accessing Kingfisher County Court Records
Copies of traffic court records in Kingfisher County are available through the clerk's office. Plain copies cost less than certified ones. If you need a certified copy for legal or administrative use, make that clear when you call or visit. Certified documents are stamped and signed by the clerk to confirm they are official. The fee is typically charged per page.
In-person requests during business hours are the fastest method. Bring some information about the case, like a name or a date, to help staff locate the file. For less urgent requests, some people mail in a written request along with a check for the copy fee. Call 405-375-3813 first to confirm the process and the current fee before mailing anything. Allow a few business days for mailed requests to be processed and returned.
Note: ODCR and OSCN show public docket summaries, not the actual filed documents. For copies of specific filings, go through the clerk's office directly.
Nearby Counties
Kingfisher County is in central Oklahoma. These bordering counties each maintain their own District Court records, all searchable through ODCR or OSCN.