Questions Submitted by: The Honorable Mark Mann, Oklahoma State Senate, District 46

2025 OK AG 11
CourtOklahoma Attorney General Reports
DecidedAugust 27, 2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 OK AG 11 (Questions Submitted by: The Honorable Mark Mann, Oklahoma State Senate, District 46) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oklahoma Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Questions Submitted by: The Honorable Mark Mann, Oklahoma State Senate, District 46, 2025 OK AG 11 (Okla. Super. Ct. 2025).

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OSCN Found Document:Questions Submitted by: The Honorable Mark Mann, Oklahoma State Senate, District 46

Questions Submitted by: The Honorable Mark Mann, Oklahoma State Senate, District 46
2025 OK AG 11
Decided: 08/27/2025
OKLAHOMA ATTORNEY GENERAL OPINIONS


Cite as: 2025 OK AG 11, __ __


0 This office has received your request for an Attorney General Opinion in which you ask, in effect, the following questions:

1. Based on title 47, section 2-117 of the Oklahoma Statutes, which state agency is responsible for patrolling and responding to incidents on Oklahoma's National System of Interstate and Defense Highways ("Interstates")?
2. If the answer to question one is the Oklahoma Highway Patrol ("OHP"), does the Department of Public Safety ("Department" or "DPS") have authority to discontinue OHP's patrol and incident response on Interstates in certain areas of Oklahoma?
3. If the answer to question two is no, does article VI, section 8 of the Oklahoma Constitution, which requires the Governor to "cause the laws of the State to be faithfully executed," compel the Governor to direct OHP to continue its enforcement responsibilities referenced above?

I.
Summary

1 This Opinion addresses only OHP's duties and responsibilities with respect to Interstates in Oklahoma. Nothing in this Opinion should be construed to apply to OHP's duties and responsibilities on state highways. 1

2 Title 47, section 2-117(D)(2) provides that OHP "shall have primary law enforcement authority respecting traffic-related offenses" on Oklahoma's Interstates, 2 while county sheriffs, municipal police departments, and other peace officers also have law enforcement authority on Interstates. OHP's "primary law enforcement authority" under section 2-117(D)(2) is a mandatory duty that cannot be abdicated or abandoned in favor of other law enforcement agencies. As such, the Governor, as DPS's chief officer, must ensure that OHP fulfills its statutory duty as the "primary law enforcement authority" by exercising its jurisdiction over all Interstates. For the reasons explained below, this office need not reach the constitutional question regarding the Governor's duty under article VI, section 8 of the Oklahoma Constitution.

II.
Background

A. DPS Announcement

3 On July 3, 2025, DPS announced its intent to "shift its valuable resources out of" Oklahoma City, Edmond, Moore, Norman, Midwest City, Del City, and Tulsa effective November 1, 2025. 3 As a result, OHP "will entrust responsibility for all" Interstates within these city limits to the respective municipal law enforcement agencies. 4 In a press conference two weeks after the announcement, DPS Commissioner Tim Tipton reiterated the need to focus OHP's patrol operations on rural Oklahoma to meet the steady increase in calls for service in those areas. 5 In short, your questions ask whether this reallocation of OHP resources from Oklahoma's two major metropolitan areas to rural Oklahoma is lawful.

B. OHP's Enabling Act

4 Created in 1937 as a division of DPS, OHP's powers and duties were "subordinate to and no way a limitation on the powers and duties of sheriffs or other peace officers of the State or any political subdivision thereof." House Bill 26, 1937 Okla. Sess. Laws ch. 50, art. 4, § 16(2). 6 This legislation also required OHP to "cooperate with sheriffs and police officers in enforcing all laws of the State of Oklahoma . . . ." Id. § 17. True enough, Oklahoma Interstates were not yet constructed in 1937, and they all did not become fully operational until 1985 when I-44 through Oklahoma City opened. 7

5 Then, in 1961, the Legislature adopted the Uniform Vehicle Code, which re-created DPS and OHP. House Bill 556, 1961 Okla. Sess. Laws tit. 47, ch. 10b, pp. 315--423. Additionally, the 1961 enactment of title 47, section 2-117 of the Oklahoma Statutes removed language making OHP "subordinate" to sheriffs and other peace officers. Compare 47 O.S.1961, § 2-117with 1937 Okla. Sess. Laws ch. 50, art. 4, § 16(2). Instead, OHP was to simply "cooperate with sheriffs and police officers in enforcing the laws regulating the operation of vehicles and the use of highways[.]" See 1961 Okla. Sess. Laws tit. 47, ch. 10b, § 2-118(a). In 1982, the Legislature again amended OHP's jurisdiction, stating for the first time that the OHP "shall have primary law enforcement authority respecting traffic related offenses upon the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways." House Bill 1617, 1982 Okla. Sess. Laws ch. 16, § 1. The same language now appears in section 2-117(D)(2). 8 Furthermore, section 2-117(B)(10) also gives the DPS, or OHP, the "authority, responsibilit[y], power[], and dut[y]" to "investigate and report traffic collisions on all [Interstates] and on all highways outside of incorporated municipalities, and may investigate traffic collisions within any incorporated municipality upon request of the local law enforcement agency." 9 And title 47, section 2-118 of the Oklahoma Statutes directs the Commissioner to "require the [OHP to] properly patrol the highways of this state." Together, these statutory provisions form the basis of the DPS's and OHP's jurisdiction on the Interstates.

6 At bottom, this opinion turns on (1) the meaning of "primary" in the context of "primary law enforcement authority," and (2) whether section 2-117(D)(2) is merely a power or, rather, a mandatory duty.

III.
Discussion

7 To be sure, this office has no reason to doubt that there is an increased need for more resources in rural Oklahoma to ensure the coverage and service Oklahomans expect from OHP. More to the point, this office concludes that the OHP's "primary law enforcement authority respecting traffic-related offenses" on Oklahoma's Interstates is a mandatory duty that cannot be abdicated to the detriment of local law enforcement, either in urban or rural areas. First, the definition of "primary" within the context of section 2-117 complements the longstanding construction of the word "shall" in statute. Second, the Legislature demonstrated its intent by using the word "shall," evidencing a legislative directive.

A. Title 47, Section 2-117 of the Oklahoma Statutes requires OHP to be the lead law enforcement authority for traffic offenses on Interstates.

8 In its first 45 years--from 1937 to 1982--OHP did not have any "primary" responsibility. As detailed above, the 1982 amendment to section 2-117 fundamentally changed OHP's enforcement responsibilities. It no longer played second fiddle to sheriffs and other law enforcement officers on Interstates. In 1982, section 1 of House Bill 1617 amended title 47, section 2-117 to read, "The powers and duties conferred on the members of the Oklahoma Highway Patrol shall not limit the powers and duties of sheriffs or other peace officers . . . provided however, . . . the Oklahoma Highway Patrol Division shall have primary law enforcement authority respecting traffic-related offenses upon the [Interstates]." 10 (Emphasis added).

9

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