🧾 1. What “expungement” means in Oklahoma
- Under Oklahoma law, expungement = sealing a record, not destroying it.
- Once sealed:
- The public cannot see the record
- You can generally legally say the incident didn’t occur in most situations
- Some limited access remains for law enforcement or courts.
⚖️ 2. Main types of expungement in Oklahoma
Oklahoma has several different statutes (mainly Title 22 §§ 18, 19, and 991(c)).
✔️ A. Non-convictions (easiest to expunge)
You may qualify if:
- Arrest but no charges filed
- Case dismissed
- Not guilty / acquitted
- Conviction overturned
👉 Often eligible after waiting periods (sometimes immediately or after 1 year).
✔️ B. Deferred sentence (Section 991(c))
- If you received a deferred sentence and completed it:
- Case is dismissed
- Record can be expunged automatically by the court
- Your name is removed from public court records
✔️ C. Misdemeanor convictions
- Many misdemeanors can be expunged
- Typical wait:
- 5 years after completing sentence (under newer laws)
✔️ D. Non-violent felony convictions
Oklahoma has expanded eligibility significantly:
- 1–2 non-violent felonies may be expunged
- Waiting periods:
- About 5–10 years after sentence completion
- Must:
- Have no pending charges
- Stay within felony limits (usually no more than 2)
👉 Since 2018, many non-violent felonies no longer require a pardon first.
❌ Not usually eligible
- Violent felonies (robbery, murder, aggravated assault, etc.)
- Sex offenses
- More than the allowed number of felony convictions
👉 These may only become eligible with a pardon first.
🧹 3. “Clean Slate” law (automatic expungement)
Oklahoma passed a Clean Slate law (2022):
- Automatically seals certain records (starting ~2025 rollout)
- Covers:
- Non-convictions
- Some misdemeanors
- Some non-violent felonies
- Requires no petition in eligible cases
🪶 4. Pardons in Oklahoma
A pardon is different from expungement:
- A pardon = forgiveness, not erasure
- Granted by the Governor after recommendation from the
Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board
Key points:
- Does not remove the conviction
- Can:
- Restore rights (like firearms in some cases)
- Improve employment opportunities
- Often used to:
- Make someone eligible for expungement
- Especially for otherwise ineligible convictions
👉 Since 2019:
- Anyone who receives a pardon can seek expungement, even for offenses previously excluded
🧩 5. Basic eligibility checklist
You may qualify if:
- ✔ No pending charges
- ✔ All fines, restitution, and probation completed
- ✔ Required waiting period passed
- ✔ Within felony limits (if applicable)
📝 6. How the process works
- File a petition in the district court where the case occurred
- Provide records and proof of eligibility
- A judge reviews and decides
👉 Expungement is not automatic (except Clean Slate cases) and must be approved by a court
💡 Bottom line
- Oklahoma has become more expungement-friendly in recent years
- Many non-violent offenses can now be sealed, even without a pardon
- Pardons still matter, especially for serious or otherwise ineligible cases
- The Clean Slate law is expanding automatic relief
