Mayes County Traffic Court Records Lookup

Mayes County traffic court records are filed at the District Court Clerk's office at One Court Place in Pryor. Court Clerk Jenifer Clinton handles all case records for the 12th Judicial District. Traffic citations from the Mayes County Sheriff and Oklahoma Highway Patrol go through this court. You can search Mayes County traffic court records online for free through OSCN or visit the clerk's office in person. Municipal citations from Pryor Creek or other city courts are handled on separate dockets not connected to OSCN.

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Mayes County Overview

Pryor County Seat
12th Judicial District
(918) 825-2185 Court Clerk Phone
OSCN / ODCR Online Access

Mayes County District Court

The Mayes County District Court is at One Court Place, Suite 200, in Pryor. Court Clerk Jenifer Clinton's office records all case filings and maintains the official docket for the 12th Judicial District, which covers Mayes, Craig, and Rogers counties. The court operates under District Judge Terry McBride, whose office number is (918) 825-3404. Associate District Judge Shawn Taylor can be reached at (918) 825-0960. Special District Judge Rebecca Gore handles additional caseload and can be reached at (918) 825-6386.

Traffic cases from state highways and county roads in Mayes County go to the District Court. The OHP and Mayes County Sheriff are the primary sources for these citations. Cases from Pryor Creek Municipal Court, which handles city ordinance violations within Pryor, do not appear in OSCN and require a separate contact with that city court. If you are not sure which court processed a citation, look at the issuing agency written on the ticket.

Court Mayes County District Court - 12th Judicial District
Address One Court Place, Suite 200, Pryor, OK 74361
Phone (918) 825-2185
Court Clerk Jenifer Clinton
District Judge Terry McBride | (918) 825-3404
Associate Judge Shawn Taylor | (918) 825-0960
Special Judge Rebecca Gore | (918) 825-6386

The image below shows a summary of court contact details and access options for Mayes County.

Mayes County Traffic Court Records - Court Records Summary

The Mayes County court records page lists the District Court contact information, judge names, and available online search options for the county.

Paying Mayes County Traffic Fines

Traffic fines from Mayes County District Court can be paid online through the OSCN E-Payments system. You need a case number or citation number to get started. The portal accepts credit and debit cards and works for most District Court traffic cases. This is the most efficient way to clear a fine without making the trip to Pryor.

In-person payments go to the Court Clerk at One Court Place, Suite 200. The clerk confirms the balance and accepts payment directly. If your OSCN docket shows a court date, check whether you must appear. Missing a required appearance can result in a warrant. For cases where you want to contest the citation, you must go to the courthouse and appear before one of the District Court judges on your scheduled date.

Note: Pryor Creek Municipal Court handles city ordinance violations separately. Fines from that court go directly to the city, not the District Court clerk.

Oklahoma Traffic Law and Point System

Oklahoma's point system applies to all traffic convictions in Mayes County District Court. If you reach 10 or more points in a five-year period, the Department of Public Safety can suspend your license. Reckless driving adds 4 points. Speeding 11 to 25 mph over the limit adds 2 points. Going 26 to 40 mph over adds 3 points. Exceeding the limit by 41 or more mph adds 4 points. These totals are tracked statewide, not just within Mayes County.

Construction zone fines double under 47 O.S. Section 11-806. School zone violations also carry doubled penalties under Section 11-806.1. US-69 and SH-28 pass through Mayes County. OHP patrols these corridors and routes those tickets to the Mayes County District Court.

Completing a state-approved defensive driving course removes 2 points from your record. This is allowed once every 24 months and applies to most moving violations. Some convictions, like DUI and no-insurance cases, can trigger automatic suspension regardless of your current point count.

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Nearby Counties

Mayes County is in northeastern Oklahoma. It borders several other counties. The 12th Judicial District also includes Craig and Rogers counties. If you are unsure which county handled your traffic case, the citation should name the issuing court.