Oklahoma Code § 2-6-202

Title 2. Agriculture: Refusal or withdrawal of inspection
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
The Board may (for such period, or indefinitely, as it deems
necessary to effectuate the purposes of this act) refuse to provide,
or withdraw, inspection service under Sections 1 through 16 of this
act with respect to any establishment if it determines, after
opportunity for a hearing is accorded to the applicant for, or
recipient of, such service, that such applicant or recipient is
unfit to engage in any business requiring inspection under Sections
1 through 16 of this act because the applicant or recipient, or

anyone responsibly connected with the applicant or recipient, has
been convicted, in any federal or state court of (1) any felony, or
(2) more than one (1) violation of any law, other than a felony,
based upon the acquiring, handling, or distributing of unwholesome,
mislabeled, or deceptively packaged food or upon fraud in connection
with transactions in food.  This section shall not affect in any way
other provisions of this act for withdrawal of inspection services
under Sections 1 through 16 from establishments failing to maintain
sanitary conditions or to destroy condemned carcasses, parts, meat
or meat food products.
For the purpose of this section a person shall be deemed to be
responsibly connected with the business if he was a partner,
officer, director, holder, or owner of ten percent (10%) or more of
its voting stock or employee in a managerial or executive capacity.
The determination and order of the Board with respect thereto under
this section shall be final and conclusive unless the affected
applicant for, or recipient of, inspection service files application
for judicial review within thirty (30) days after the effective date
of such order in the appropriate court as provided in Section 25.
Judicial review of any such order shall be upon the record upon
which the determination and order are based.

‹ Prev All Oklahoma sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.