Oklahoma Code § 74-151.3

Title 74. State Government: Unidentified persons – Missing persons – Data
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procedures.
A.  As used in this section:
1.  "Missing person" means any person, including a child under
eighteen (18) years of age, reported to Oklahoma law enforcement as
missing and unaccounted for from expected and normal activities; and
2.  "Unidentified person" means any person living or deceased
who is unidentified after all available methods have been exhausted.
This includes any decedent released to the Office of the Chief
Medical Examiner (OCME) where the identity of the decedent cannot be
established to the satisfaction of the Chief Medical Examiner.
B.  Unidentified Persons.  The OCME and the Oklahoma State
Bureau of Investigation (OSBI) shall input the following data, if
available for unidentified persons, into the National Missing and
Unidentified Persons System (NamUs), created by the National
Institute of Justice of the United States Department of Justice:
1.  Copies of fingerprints on standardized eight inch by eight
inch (8" x 8") fingerprint cards or the equivalent digital image;
prints or partial prints of any fingers;
2.  Any forensic dental report or radiology imaging;
3.  Detailed personal descriptions;
4.  Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) information;
5.  Radiology imaging and medical data; and
6.  All other identifying data, including date and place of
death.

C.  Missing Persons.  Once a missing persons report is received,
the law enforcement agency shall initiate the following procedures
within thirty (30) days of receiving the report:
1.  Submit the missing persons case to NamUs and to any database
of missing persons currently required by the agency, providing all
appropriate data;
2.  Locate and obtain biometric records, including medical and
dental records, medical and dental X-rays or other medical imaging,
and enter the records into NamUs.  All medical and dental records
obtained shall be considered confidential and shall not be released
to the public;
3.  Utilize NamUs family reference sample (FRS) submission kits,
obtain voluntary DNA samples from appropriate family members to
submit to an institution of higher education that specializes in DNA
identification for a full genetic profile, including testing of
mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), short tandem repeats on the Y-chromosome
(Y-STR) and nuclear analyses, to be documented in the NamUs missing
persons file and submitted to the FBI's National DNA Index System
(NDIS) using the Combined DNA Index System (CODIS).  If necessary,
the law enforcement agency may request assistance in obtaining FRS
DNA samples; and
4.  Attempt to locate any fingerprints from available resources
and submit those records to NamUs.
D.  Upon request by local law enforcement, the OSBI shall
attempt to locate any fingerprints and photographs from the
available resources and submit those records to NamUs.
E.  No Oklahoma law enforcement agency shall require a delay in
the taking of a report of a missing person when reliable information
has been provided to the law enforcement agency that the person is
missing.  No law enforcement agency shall mandate the appearance of
a next of kin before initiating a missing persons investigation.
F.  If the OSBI receives a report of a missing person from
another law enforcement agency or medical examiner, the OSBI shall
maintain a record of the case file.  The OSBI shall promulgate rules
relating to the dissemination and retention of the records.  The
rules shall require that the process of releasing the records shall
occur as soon as practicable from the time the OSBI receives a
report that a person, for whom there is a previous record, is
missing.
G.  The information contained in the missing persons files of
the OSBI shall be available to the OCME and law enforcement agencies
attempting to identify unidentified persons.
H.  No law enforcement agency shall establish or maintain any
policy which requires the observance of a waiting period before
accepting and investigating a missing child report.  Upon receipt of
a report of a missing child, a law enforcement agency shall enter
the child into the National Crime Information Center (NCIC) pursuant

to a mandate by the Federal Bureau of Investigation which requires
the name of the missing child to be entered within two (2) hours
from the time the child is reported missing to the law enforcement
agency.
I.  When a person previously reported missing has been found or
when an unidentified person has been identified, the reporting
agency or OCME shall report to NamUs within twenty-four (24) hours
that the person has been found and that the case can be archived
within NamUs.
J.  Nothing in this section prohibits a law enforcement agency
or the OCME from maintaining case files related to missing persons
or unidentified bodies.
K.  Nothing in this section supersedes the authority of the OCME
to obtain dental or medical records, including X-rays, in cases in
which these records are necessary for the identification of human
remains.
L.  The Council on Law Enforcement Education and Training
(CLEET) shall establish appropriate training resources focused on
the investigations of unidentified and missing persons and shall
require all CLEET-certified law enforcement officers to complete
such training on a regular basis to be determined by CLEET.  Such
training may be conducted in conjunction with resources available
through NamUs.

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