Oklahoma
Are Autopsy Reports Public in Oklahoma? (2026)

Oklahoma autopsy reports are generally public records, but the full autopsy and toxicology report is withheld from public inspection for 10 business days after it is generated, and release can be delayed longer if it would compromise an active criminal investigation. Immediate family, law enforcement, and media receive copies free; the general public pays a small fee once the case is complete.
Are Autopsy Reports Public in Oklahoma?
Yes, Oklahoma autopsy reports are generally public records, with timing limits. The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner (OCME) keeps full and complete records of every investigated death, and the autopsy report is part of that record.
Under 63 O.S. Section 945, the full autopsy report is withheld from public inspection and copying for 10 business days after it is generated. This window gives the family time to review the findings first.
Release can be delayed beyond those 10 days if a law enforcement agency declares that the report would materially compromise an ongoing criminal investigation. In that situation, the full report stays restricted until the hold is lifted.
A summary report of the investigation is treated as a public record and is available sooner. So even when a full autopsy report is briefly held, basic investigation information may still be obtainable.
Who Performs Autopsies in Oklahoma?
Oklahoma uses a centralized, statewide medical examiner system rather than county coroners. The Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, governed by the Board of Medicolegal Investigations, handles death investigations across all 77 counties from its Central Office in Oklahoma City and its Eastern Office in Tulsa.

The OCME investigates deaths that are violent, sudden, suspicious, or unexplained. This includes homicides, suicides, accidents, deaths under unusual or unnatural circumstances, and deaths not attended by a licensed physician.
It also covers deaths from a disease that may threaten public health, deaths during or following a medical procedure where the outcome was unexpected, deaths of inmates in custody, and bodies headed for cremation or out-of-state transport.
An autopsy is not performed in every case. State law directs the medical examiner to perform an autopsy when it is necessary to determine the cause or manner of death and when the public interest requires it. Many investigated deaths are resolved through an external examination rather than a full autopsy.
Who Can Request an Oklahoma Autopsy Report?
Once a report is released, anyone may request it, but Oklahoma treats certain requesters differently. The OCME provides complimentary copies to immediate family members, law enforcement, and media outlets who submit a written request.
The general public can also obtain reports, but pays a fee. Members of the public who are not immediate family must pay for the copy and are subject to the same completion and 10-business-day timing rules.
Every request must include the decedent's full name, the date of death, and the requestor's relationship to the deceased. Media outlets are exempt from stating a relationship to the decedent.
Because the full report is briefly withheld and may be held longer for active criminal cases, even an eligible requester may have to wait until the case is complete and any law-enforcement hold is lifted.
How to Get an Autopsy or Toxicology Report in Oklahoma
To get an Oklahoma autopsy or toxicology report, submit a written request to the OCME office that handled the case, after the case is complete. The toxicology results are part of the full autopsy file the office maintains.

Send requests to the correct office. Family and law enforcement requests generally go to the records contact for the Central Office in Oklahoma City, and Tulsa-area cases go to the Eastern Office. Media requests use the dedicated media records address.
Fees and processing
The general public pays $20 for an autopsy case report and $10 for a non-autopsy case report. Immediate family, law enforcement, and media receive copies free of charge with a written request.
Reports are released only once the case is completed. Complex cases, especially those awaiting toxicology or tied to a criminal investigation, can take weeks or months to finalize.
Pending and open-case holds
If the cause and manner of death are still pending, the full autopsy report is not yet available. On top of the standard 10-business-day inspection window, a law enforcement hold on an active criminal investigation can keep the full report restricted.
If you need confirmation of timing for a specific case, contact the OCME records staff directly. Both the Oklahoma City and Tulsa offices are open Monday through Friday during business hours.
Autopsy Report vs Death Certificate in Oklahoma
The autopsy report and the death certificate are two different documents. They serve different purposes and are issued by different processes.
The Oklahoma death certificate is a vital record issued through the state vital records system. It lists the legal cause and manner of death on a single line and is the document used for estates, insurance, and benefits.
The autopsy report is the medical examiner's detailed account of the examination. It can run many pages and include internal findings, injury descriptions, and toxicology results, far more detail than the certificate's cause-of-death line.
When the cause of death is pending, the death certificate reflects that status, and the office amends it once the investigation is complete. For full medical detail, you need the OCME autopsy report rather than the certificate.
Oklahoma Autopsy Report Facts
| Item | Oklahoma |
|---|---|
| Public record? | Yes, but full report withheld 10 business days after it is generated (63 O.S. Section 945) |
| Death investigation system | Statewide medical examiner (OCME), not county coroners |
| Who performs autopsies | Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, Oklahoma City and Tulsa offices |
| Who can request | Anyone once released; free for immediate family, law enforcement, and media |
| Office to contact | OCME records (Central Office Oklahoma City / Eastern Office Tulsa) |
| Fee (general public) | $20 autopsy case, $10 non-autopsy case; free for family, law enforcement, media |
| Pending/open-case hold | Released only after case is complete; law-enforcement holds can extend the delay |

Disclaimer: This page is general information, not legal advice. Records rules, fees, and processing times change. Confirm current requirements with the Oklahoma Office of the Chief Medical Examiner before relying on anything here.
Sources
This page draws on the Oklahoma Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, the Oklahoma Statutes (Title 63), and the CDC's coroner/medical examiner law summary; verify current details directly with the OCME.
Up: Oklahoma Death Records | Hub: Death Records by State | Related: Are Autopsies Public Records?
Sources and References
- Oklahoma Office of the Chief Medical Examiner - Case Information / Records Requests(oklahoma.gov).gov
- Oklahoma OCME - Frequently Asked Questions(oklahoma.gov).gov
- 63 O.S. Section 945 - Person to perform autopsy; report of findings(oklahoma.gov).gov
- CDC Public Health Law - Oklahoma Coroner/Medical Examiner Laws(cdc.gov).gov