Oklahoma Code § 10A-1-6-103

Title 10A. Children And Juvenile Code: Inspection of records without court order
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A.  Juvenile court records and Department of Human Services
agency records pertaining to a child may be inspected, and their
contents shall be disclosed, without a court order to the following
persons upon showing of proper credentials and pursuant to their
lawful duties:
1.  The court having the child currently before it in any
proceeding pursuant to this title, any district court or tribal
court to which such proceedings may be transferred, employees and
officers of the court in the performance of their duties, including
but not limited to guardians ad litem appointed by the court, and
court-appointed special advocates;
2.  A district attorney, United States Attorney, or Attorney
General of this or another state and the employees of such offices
in the course of their official duties pursuant to this title or the
prosecution of crimes against children, or upon their request in
their official capacity as advisor in a grand jury proceeding;
3.  The attorney representing a child who is the subject of a
proceeding pursuant to the provisions of this title or other
proceeding where child custody or visitation is at issue;
4.  Employees of juvenile bureaus in the course of their
official duties pursuant to this title, and employees of the
Department of Human Services in the course of their official duties;
5.  Employees of a law enforcement agency of this or another
state or military enclave and employees of a child protective
service of another state or military enclave in the course of their
official duties pertaining to investigations of a report of known or
suspected child abuse or neglect or crimes against children or for
the purpose of determining whether to place a child in protective
custody;
6.  The Oklahoma Commission on Children and Youth as provided by
Sections 601.2 and 601.6 of Title 10 of the Oklahoma Statutes;
7.  The Office of Juvenile Affairs;
8.  A federally recognized Indian tribe in which the child who
is the subject of the record is a member or is eligible to become a
member of the tribe and is the biological child of a member of an
Indian tribe pursuant to the provisions of the Federal Indian Child
Welfare Act and the Oklahoma Indian Child Welfare Act; provided such
Indian tribe, in the course of its official duties, is:
a. investigating a report of known or suspected child
abuse or neglect or crimes against children or for the

purpose of determining whether to place a child in
protective custody,
b. providing services to or for the benefit of a child
including, but not limited to, protective, emergency,
social and medical services, or
c. the tribe, the tribal court or the tribal child
welfare program has asserted jurisdiction or
intervened in any case in which the child is the
subject of the proceedings or is a party to the
proceedings pursuant to the authority provided in the
Oklahoma Indian Child Welfare Act.
The records that are to be provided to Indian tribes under this
subsection shall include all case records, reports, and documents as
defined in Section 1-6-101 of this title;
9.  The Governor or to any person the Governor designates, in
writing;
10.  Any federal official of the United States Department of
Health and Human Services;
11.  Any member of the Legislature approved in writing by the
Speaker of the House of Representatives or the President Pro Tempore
of the Senate;
12.  A foster parent, with regard to records concerning the
social, medical, psychological, or educational needs of a child
currently placed with that foster parent or of a child being
considered for placement with that foster parent;
13.  An employee of any state or federal corrections or law
enforcement agency in the performance of the official duties of the
employee concerning presentence investigations or supervision of a
parent of an alleged or adjudicated deprived child, or the legal
guardian, custodian, or any other adult member of the child’s home
who is responsible for the health, safety, or welfare of the child;
14.  An employee of a state agency of this or another state in
the performance of the official duties of the employee concerning
the establishment of paternity or the establishment or enforcement
of a child support order or other entitlement for the benefit of a
child; provided, disclosure shall be limited to information directly
related to the purpose of such disclosure;
15.  Any member of a city-county Health Department Fetal Infant
Mortality Review (FIMR) in the performance of the official duties of
the member concerning investigations of fetal and infant
mortalities; provided, disclosure shall be limited to information
directly related to the purpose of such disclosure;
16.  Any designated federal authorities at the federal military
installation where a service member is assigned, when the child is a
member of an active duty military family, as provided by paragraph 4
of subsection A of Section 1-2-102 of this title;

17.  Any member of the Child Welfare Review Committee for the
Death and Near Death of Children With Disabilities as established by
Section 1-10-103 of this title; and
18.  The Office of Client Advocacy within the State Department
of Health.
B.  In addition to the persons listed in subsection A of this
section, juvenile court records may be inspected, and their contents
shall be disclosed, without a court order to the following persons
upon showing of proper credentials and pursuant to their lawful
duties:
1.  Employees of court-appointed special advocate programs, as
defined in Section 1-1-105 of this title, in the course of their
official duties pertaining to recruiting, screening, training,
assigning cases, supervising, and supporting volunteers in their
roles as guardian ad litem pursuant to Section 1-4-306 of this
title;
2.  Members of postadjudication review boards established
pursuant to the provisions of Section 1116.2 of Title 10 of the
Oklahoma Statutes, the Child Death Review Board, and
multidisciplinary personnel.  In addition to juvenile court records,
members of such postadjudication review boards may inspect, without
a court order, information that includes, but is not limited to:
a. psychological and medical records,
b. placement history and information, including the names
and addresses of foster parents,
c. family assessments,
d. treatment or service plans, and
e. school records;
3.  The Department of Human Services or other public or private
agency or individual having court-ordered custody or physical
custody pursuant to Department placement of the child, or conducting
a child abuse or neglect investigation of the child who is the
subject of the record.  In addition to juvenile court records,
employees of the Department may inspect, without a court order and
upon a showing of proper credentials and pursuant to their lawful
duties, information that includes, but is not limited to:
a. psychological and medical records, and
b. nondirectory education records;
4.  The child who is the subject of the record and the parents,
legal guardian, custodian, or foster parent of such child; and
5.  A person authorized by the court to conduct bona fide
research, provided such research may not publish the names or
identities of parents, children, or other persons contained in the
records.
C.  In addition to the persons and entities named in subsection
A of this section, Department of Human Services agency records may
be inspected, and their contents shall be disclosed, without a court

order to the following persons upon showing of proper credentials
and pursuant to their lawful duties:
1.  Postadjudicatory review boards, court-appointed special
advocates, and members of the Child Death Review Board;
2.  Any district court which has ordered a home study by the
Department in an action for divorce, annulment, custody of a child,
or appointment of a legal guardian of a child, or any subsequent
proceeding in such actions; provided, however, the Department may
limit disclosure in the home study to summaries or to information
directly related to the purpose of the disclosure;
3.  Members of multidisciplinary teams or multidisciplinary
personnel designated by the Department, investigating a report of
known or suspected child abuse or neglect or providing services to a
child or family which is the subject of the report;
4.  A physician who has before him or her a child whom the
physician reasonably suspects may be abused or neglected or any
health care or mental health professionals involved in the
evaluation or treatment of the child or the parents, legal guardian,
foster parent, custodian, or other family members of the child;
5.  Any public or private agency or person authorized by the
Department to diagnose, or provide care, treatment, supervision, or
other services to a child who is the subject of a report or record
of child abuse or neglect; provided, the Department may limit such
disclosure to summaries or to information directly necessary for the
purpose of such disclosure;
6.  Any person or agency for research purposes, if all of the
following conditions are met:
a. the person or agency conducting the research is
employed by the State of Oklahoma or is under contract
with this state and is authorized by the Department to
conduct the research, and
b. the person or agency conducting the research ensures
that all documents containing identifying information
are maintained in secure locations and access to the
documents by unauthorized persons is prohibited; that
no identifying information is included in documents
generated from the research conducted; and that all
identifying information is deleted from documents used
in the research when the research is completed;
7.  The Oklahoma Health Care Authority; and
8.  A medical examiner when such person is determining the cause
of death of a child.
D.  In accordance with the rules promulgated for such purpose
pursuant to Section 620.6 of Title 10 of the Oklahoma Statutes,
records listed in subsection A of Section 1-6-102 of this title may
be inspected and their contents disclosed without a court order to
participating agencies.

E.  The court may disclose to an employee of an out-of-state
entity, licensed to perform adoption home studies in that state,
whether the prospective adoptive parent has had parental rights to a
child terminated in Oklahoma or whether the prospective adoptive
parent has relinquished parental rights to a child in Oklahoma.
F.  Nothing in this section shall be construed as prohibiting
the Department from disclosing such confidential information as may
be necessary to secure appropriate care, treatment, protection or
supervision of a child alleged to be abused or neglected.
Added by Laws 1991, c. 296, § 11, eff. Jan. 1, 1992.  Amended by
Laws 1993, c. 78, § 1, emerg. eff. April 18, 1993; Laws 1993, c.
306, § 2, eff. Sept. 1, 1993; Laws 1995, c. 352, § 59, eff. July 1,
1995.  Renumbered from § 1125.2 of Title 10 by Laws 1995, c. 352, §
199, eff. July 1, 1995.  Amended by Laws 1996, c. 200, § 18, eff.
Nov. 1, 1996; Laws 1997, c. 386, § 20, emerg. eff. June 10, 1997;
Laws 1998, c. 416, § 8, eff. Nov. 1, 1998; Laws 2000, c. 374, § 26,
eff. July 1, 2000; Laws 2005, c. 153, § 1, eff. Nov. 1, 2005; Laws
2009, c. 233, § 73, emerg. eff. May 21, 2009.  Renumbered from §
7005-1.3 of Title 10 by Laws 2009, c. 233, § 271, emerg. eff. May
21, 2009.  Amended by Laws 2010, c. 278, § 14, eff. Nov. 1, 2010;
Laws 2011, c. 371, § 8, eff. Nov. 1, 2011; Laws 2014, c. 256, § 2,
eff. Nov. 1, 2014; Laws 2014, c. 355, § 4, eff. Nov. 1, 2014; Laws
2016, c. 130, § 3, eff. Nov. 1, 2016; Laws 2017, c. 42, § 3; Laws
2025, c. 215, § 1, emerg. eff. May 13, 2025.

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