Logan County Warrant Lookup
Logan County warrant records are kept by the District Court Clerk and the Sheriff's Office in Guthrie, Oklahoma. The Oklahoma State Courts Network gives you free access to court dockets and case files from this county. If you need to check on a warrant or pull up a criminal case, OSCN is the best place to start. The courthouse in Guthrie holds all paper files and handles in-person requests during normal hours. This page walks through every tool and office you can use to search for warrant records in Logan County.
Logan County Overview
Logan County District Court Records
The Logan County District Court sits in Guthrie. All warrant records filed here are kept by the Court Clerk. The clerk takes care of case filings, record requests, and hands out copies of court docs to the public. If you need a certified copy of a warrant or want to look at a specific case, this is where you go first. The courthouse is open Monday through Friday.
| Address | 301 E. Harrison Ave, Guthrie, OK 73044 |
|---|---|
| Phone | (405) 282-0123 |
| Hours | Monday - Friday, 8:00 AM to 4:30 PM |
| Judicial District | 9th |
| Website | OSCN Case Search |
Logan County handles criminal felony and misdemeanor cases, civil suits, family law, traffic violations, and small claims. Warrant records show up in criminal case dockets. When a judge signs a warrant, the docket will list the date, the type of warrant, and whether it has been served. Once law enforcement executes the warrant and the person shows up in court, the file gets an update with the return date. The clerk can help you find a case by name or number.
Copy fees at the Logan County courthouse run from $0.50 to $2.00 per page. Certified copies cost a bit more. Bring a photo ID if you go in person.
Search Logan County Warrants Online
The best free way to search Logan County warrant records is through OSCN. Head to the search page, pick "Logan" from the county list, and type in a name or case number. You get results for criminal, civil, traffic, probate, and small claims cases. Each case has a docket that shows all events, including when a warrant was issued and if it was served or recalled. Most digital records on OSCN go back to the late 1990s or early 2000s. Anything older than that means a trip to the courthouse in Guthrie.
You can filter results by party type, case type, filing date, and closed date. That helps a lot when a name pulls up too many hits. Criminal felony cases use the code CF. Misdemeanors are CM. Traffic is TR. Small claims use SC. Start with the defendant name and narrow from there. The docket entries tell you what happened at each step of the case.
ODCR is another option. It stands for On Demand Court Records. ODCR is a subscription service that covers courts across Oklahoma. It sometimes shows more recent docket updates than OSCN and lets you search across multiple counties at once. Free users can still see basic case info on the site.
The Guthrie city website provides local government information for the Logan County seat where the courthouse is located.
Guthrie serves as the hub for all Logan County court and law enforcement operations, including warrant processing at the district courthouse.
Logan County Sheriff Warrant Services
The Logan County Sheriff's Office handles warrant execution for all warrants the District Court issues. The Sheriff keeps records of active warrants and works with other agencies in the area. You can call or visit during business hours to ask about a warrant. Have your full legal name and date of birth ready when you make the inquiry. The office can tell you if there is an active warrant under your name or someone else's name.
Active arrest warrants in Oklahoma do not expire on their own. They stay in the system until the court recalls them or law enforcement serves them. Bench warrants work the same way. A bench warrant gets issued when someone skips a court date. It stays active until the person shows up before the judge. Under Title 22 of the Oklahoma Statutes, warrants must meet certain requirements to be valid. They need the court name, a description of the person or property, the legal basis, the judge's signature, and time limits for execution where they apply.
If you think you have a warrant in Logan County, the Sheriff's Office can check for you. They may explain your options. Self-surrender is one path. Judges tend to look at that more favorably when setting bail.
OSBI Background Checks for Logan County
The Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation runs the CHIRP system. CHIRP stands for Criminal History Information Request Portal. A name-based search costs $15 and pulls from the statewide criminal history database. If a warrant in Logan County led to an arrest and booking, that event may show up in the CHIRP report. The report includes arrest records, conviction history, and other data tied to a name and date of birth.
CHIRP shows arrest history, not current warrant status. A name-based search is less precise than a fingerprint check. For official screening, a fingerprint-based report gives more reliable results. Still, CHIRP is a solid starting point if you want to see what the state has on file for someone connected to Logan County cases.
The Oklahoma Department of Corrections also offers a free offender lookup tool. If someone was convicted in Logan County and is serving time, their custody status and facility location show up in the DOC database. That helps you see if a warrant has already led to incarceration.
Note: CHIRP results should be verified with the Court Clerk for the most current warrant information.
Legal Resources in Logan County
If you have an active warrant, talk to a lawyer first. An attorney can reach out to the court on your behalf and set up a plan for resolving the matter. The Oklahoma Bar Association Lawyer Referral Service connects you to attorneys who practice in the 9th Judicial District. Oklahoma Legal Aid Services offers free help to those who qualify based on income.
Warrant resolution goes smoother with a lawyer. They know the local court procedures, who to call at the clerk's office, and what to expect at a hearing. For minor bench warrants from missed court dates, a judge may allow a quick appearance to recall the warrant. Your lawyer can set that up. Do not put it off. An active warrant can affect your ability to renew a license or find housing in Oklahoma. The longer it sits, the harder things get.
Oklahoma Open Records Act
Oklahoma's Open Records Act, found in Title 51, Section 24A of the Oklahoma Statutes, sets the rules for public access to government records. Most court records in Logan County are public. Once a warrant is executed and returned to the court, it becomes part of the public case file. You can request copies through the Court Clerk.
There are exceptions. Active warrants that have not been served may have limited access to protect law enforcement operations. Juvenile records are sealed under Oklahoma law and cannot be released without a court order. If a record request is denied, the agency must give you a written explanation with the specific legal reason. You can appeal that denial to the district attorney or take legal action if needed.
Cities in Logan County
Guthrie is the county seat and the largest city in Logan County. All warrant records go through the courthouse in Guthrie. Other communities in the county include Crescent, Mulhall, Orlando, and Coyle. None of these towns are large enough for a dedicated city page. All warrant matters for these places go through the Logan County District Court. Residents in the southern part of Logan County are close to Edmond, which sits just across the border in Oklahoma County.
Nearby Counties
These counties border Logan County in central Oklahoma.