Tulsa County Jail Inmate Search Oklahoma, Bail, Mail Rules & Visiting

Tulsa County Jail Inmate Search Oklahoma, Bail, Mail Rules & Visiting 2026
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Tulsa County Jail Inmate Search Oklahoma: David L. Moss Roster, Bail & Visiting 2026

This guide explains how to use the official Tulsa County Inmate Information Center, confirm custody at the David L. Moss Criminal Justice Center, understand booking and bond steps, send mail correctly, deposit money, schedule visitation, recover property, and follow Oklahoma court-record updates without relying on outdated jail-directory copies.

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: Pursuant to Oklahoma public-record access principles and local jail procedures, this page is for informational use only. A Tulsa County jail roster entry, booking ID, charge listing, mugshot, warrant note, or inmate-search result is not a conviction. All arrestees and detainees are presumed innocent unless adjudicated guilty in a court of competent jurisdiction. Always verify custody status, bond, release eligibility, visitation approval, mail rules, court dates, and payment requirements directly with the Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office, Tulsa County Inmate Information Center, Tulsa County District Court, or qualified legal counsel.

The Tulsa County Jail is officially the David L. Moss Criminal Justice Center, often shortened to DLMCJC or “David L. Moss.” It is located in downtown Tulsa at 300 North Denver Avenue and is operated by the Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office. When people search “Tulsa County jail inmate search Oklahoma,” they are usually trying to answer one of several urgent questions: Was the person booked? What is the booking ID? Is the person still in custody? What is the charge? Is there a bond? Can family visit? Where should mail or money be sent? Which court record should be checked next?

The correct first step is the official Tulsa County Inmate Information Center. The Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office links to the inmate search by name and booking ID list from its detention and jail information pages. The search system explains that users may specify first and last names and that partial names can be searched. That matters because names are frequently misspelled, shortened, hyphenated, or entered differently from what family members expect.

Do not rely on a copied jail roster, paid background-check page, social media screenshot, or old mugshot page as your final source. Tulsa County jail data can change quickly. A person can be in booking, sent to housing, released, transported to court, transferred, held for another agency, listed under a different spelling, or connected to a case that has not yet appeared on OSCN. A useful jail page must help the visitor take the next correct step, not just repeat a facility address.

📍 Jail Address

Facility:
David L. Moss Criminal Justice Center

Physical Location:
300 N. Denver Avenue
Tulsa, OK 74103

Use this for: facility location, approved mail addressing, property-room planning, legal visit coordination, and map directions.

📞 Jail Contacts

Main Jail Number:
918-596-8900

Property Room:
918-596-8872

Medical Information Helpline:
1-800-246-0881

Emergency:
Call 911 only for immediate danger, active threats, or urgent medical emergencies.

🏢 Sheriff / Court Locations

TCSO Headquarters:
6080 E. 66th Street North
Tulsa, OK 74117

Tulsa County Courthouse:
500 S. Denver Avenue
Tulsa, OK 74103

Non-Emergency Line:
918-596-5600

🏗️ Facility Capacity

Opened:
1997

Original Capacity:
1,714 beds

Expanded Capacity:
2,020 beds after later mental health and dorm-style unit additions.

Operations:
24/7 facility staffed by detention, medical, and mental-health professionals.

II. Booking ID, Mugshots & Roster Status Limits

A Tulsa County booking entry can include details that help identify the inmate, but it must be read carefully. A booking ID or DLM number is an administrative jail identifier. It is not the same as a criminal case number. A mugshot or booking photo, if visible, is an administrative image connected to an arrest event. It is not proof of guilt. A charge label is not always the final prosecutor-filed charge. These distinctions matter because Tulsa County is a high-volume jurisdiction with many similar names, multiple arresting agencies, and heavy criminal docket activity.

Roster-status warning: A jail search result can show booking or custody information, but Oklahoma court records must be checked separately for filed charges, hearing dates, docket entries, judgments, pleas, dismissals, warrants, and final case outcomes.

Users should separate the data into three lanes. The jail lane shows booking, custody, DLM number, and housing-related information. The court lane shows case filings, docket entries, hearings, warrants, bonds ordered by the judge, pleas, and disposition. The criminal-history lane may involve OSBI or another authorized background-check process. Mixing these lanes is how people overstate what a jail record proves.

For public posting, employment screening, landlord decisions, licensing, immigration, custody disputes, or news publication, do not rely only on a mugshot. Confirm the identity, case number, and court status. A wrong identity claim can damage a person’s job, family, housing, and legal position. Your page should help users verify, not inflame.

III. Bail Bonds & Pre-Trial Release Procedures

Bail in Tulsa County is a legal release mechanism, not a final case result. Some people may be eligible for cash bond, surety bond through a licensed bondsman, recognizance release, supervised release, or a court-ordered condition-based release. Others may be held because of a no-bond warrant, probation issue, another county hold, federal/ICE issue, municipal matter, new charge, or court order.

The Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office explains that inmates unable to post bond are dressed in jail-issued uniforms and sent to housing units for custody and care. That means families should not assume an inmate will be released quickly simply because money is available. Release depends on bond type, court paperwork, arresting agency records, identity verification, holds, and internal processing.

Bail timing warning: Posting bond does not guarantee immediate release. Processing can be delayed by intake, warrant checks, medical screening, housing movement, property return, court paperwork, multiple case numbers, another jurisdiction’s hold, or a separate no-bond matter.

Before paying any bondsman or sending money, verify the inmate’s full legal name, DLM number, booking ID, exact charge group, bond amount, bond type, court, and hold status. A common mistake is paying bond on one case while another warrant keeps the person in custody. Another mistake is confusing commissary money with bond money. Commissary deposits do not pay bond, and bond payments do not create phone-call or commissary access.

If the case involves domestic assault, protective orders, DUI, weapon allegations, probation, drug court, mental-health court, or failure to appear, assume there may be special release conditions. Conditions can include no contact, GPS monitoring, alcohol/drug testing, firearm restrictions, court reporting, treatment requirements, or stay-away orders. Violating release conditions can cause re-arrest and new charges.

IV. Inmate Communications: Phone Calls, Video Visits & JailATM

Inmates at the David L. Moss Criminal Justice Center generally cannot receive incoming personal calls. Family members, employers, and friends may call the jail for public information, but staff will not transfer ordinary phone calls into a housing unit. Communication is handled through approved phone, visitation, and vendor systems.

TCSO identifies JailATM.com as the website for more information about video visitation. The jail information page also describes a third-party video visitation system that allows people with internet access to schedule video visits. Because third-party vendor rules can change, users should start from the official TCSO jail information page and then move to the vendor site. That reduces the risk of using a fake payment page or outdated deposit link.

All non-privileged calls, messages, and visits should be treated as monitored or reviewable. Do not discuss alleged facts of the case, witnesses, victim contact, drugs, firearms, hidden property, money movement, vehicles, social media posts, co-defendants, or anything that could create a new criminal issue. Attorney communication is different, but legal communication should be handled through counsel and proper procedures, not casual family calls.

Communication checklist:
  • Confirm the inmate’s full name and DLM number before using any vendor.
  • Use the official TCSO links for JailATM or related services.
  • Separate video visitation accounts, phone funds, trust-account deposits, and commissary money.
  • Do not talk about the case on ordinary calls or video visits.
  • Call the jail for custody-status problems and the vendor for account/payment problems.

V. Strict Mail Regulations, Books, Photos & Contraband

Tulsa County mail rules are detailed, and this is where many families make avoidable mistakes. TCSO states that acceptable mail items include letters and postcards, certain greeting cards, small photographs, newspapers mailed directly from a publisher, and books from Amazon Fulfillment Services or Barnes & Noble only. Mail must be addressed with the inmate’s full name and DLM number, care of David L. Moss, at 300 N Denver Ave., Tulsa, OK 74103.

Mail address format:

Inmate’s Full Name and DLM #
C/O David L. Moss
300 N Denver Ave.
Tulsa, OK 74103

Photographs cannot exceed 5 inches by 7 inches, and TCSO recommends writing the inmate’s name and inmate ID number on the back. Polaroids are not accepted. Personal photographs cannot contain nudity, partial nudity, revealing or form-fitting clothing, hand signs, overtly sexual content, or sexually suggestive material. Greeting cards cannot be excessively large, thick, embossed, transparent-overlay style, ribbon/string attached, sound-making, or two-ply cards.

Books are accepted only when mailed directly from Amazon Fulfillment Services or Barnes & Noble. Packages containing anything other than books are prohibited, including maps, calendars, and care packages. Publications that contain material considered objectionable or a facility-security threat may be returned or treated as contraband.

TCSO’s prohibited-mail list is strict. Mail can be treated as contraband or returned if it comes in a padded envelope or box, contains currency or negotiable items, postage stamps, stickers, stationery, envelopes, laminated material, tissue, blotter paper, construction paper, food, crayon, marker, wax, watercolor, white-out, perfume, cologne, powder, lipstick, sound-making devices, loose pages from books, explicit material, gang-related content, gambling material, extortion threats, escape information, weapon construction instructions, drug-manufacturing instructions, coded messages, or material that presents a threat to safety or security.

Contraband warning: Do not improvise. If the item is not clearly allowed by TCSO’s current mail rules, assume it will be rejected. One “small harmless thing” can cause the entire envelope to be returned or placed as contraband.

VI. Money, Trust Account & Commissary Deposits

TCSO states that all cash in a person’s possession at booking is deposited into the inmate’s trust fund account. Inmates at the David L. Moss Criminal Justice Center may receive funds through mail or through deposits made by on-site kiosks or online using JailATM.com or CSGpay.com. The kiosks are located in the DLMCJC front lobby and accept cash and credit cards for a nominal fee.

Funds sent by mail must be money orders or cashier’s checks, not cash or personal checks. The mailing format for funds is David L. Moss Criminal Justice Center, inmate’s name and inmate ID number, 300 North Denver Avenue, Tulsa, Oklahoma 74103. The inmate’s name and DLMCJC number must be written on the money order, but TCSO warns not to put that identifying information in the “Pay to the Order” space. A return address must be on the envelope, and all identifying information must be complete, correct, and legible or the money order/cashier’s check may be returned.

Money-by-mail format:

David L. Moss Criminal Justice Center
Inmate’s Name / Inmate’s ID #
300 North Denver Avenue
Tulsa, Oklahoma 74103

Do not confuse trust-account deposits with bond. Do not confuse trust-account deposits with court costs. Do not confuse commissary with phone or video visitation. These are different systems. If you put money into the wrong system, the inmate may not receive the help you intended, and refunds can be slow or difficult.

VII. Medical Services, Property Pickup & ICE Issues

Medical services at the David L. Moss Criminal Justice Center are provided by Turnkey Medical Inc., and TCSO lists a medical information helpline at 1-800-246-0881. Family members should not arrive at the jail with prescription medication expecting immediate acceptance. Call first, explain the issue, and ask what documentation or process is required. Be ready with the inmate’s full name, DLM number, date of birth, diagnosis, medication name, dosage, prescribing doctor, pharmacy, allergies, recent hospital history, mental-health risk, seizure risk, insulin needs, pregnancy concerns, withdrawal risk, or mobility limitations.

For urgent medical risk, be precise. “He needs medication” is weak. “He takes insulin twice daily, pharmacy is X, prescribing physician is Y, and he has a history of diabetic emergencies” is stronger. Correctional medical staff need specific facts, not panic or vague messages. Do not exaggerate, but do not understate serious risks.

Property pickup must be scheduled with the DLMCJC property clerk. TCSO states that property pickups are Monday through Friday from 8:00 AM to 4:00 PM, closed on observed holidays, and the property-room number is 918-596-8872. Call before travel. If no one answers, follow voicemail instructions. Do not assume you can retrieve all property without inmate authorization, staff approval, or evidence clearance.

Property issues are different from vehicle impound issues. If a vehicle was towed during the arrest, the release process may involve the arresting agency, tow company, registered owner, valid driver, insurance, lienholder, or evidence hold. Ask who towed the vehicle and whether a law-enforcement hold exists before going to a tow yard.

For ICE detainee issues, TCSO directs users to ICE resources. Immigration matters can affect release, transfer, visitation, and legal strategy. If a person may have an immigration hold or federal detainer, do not assume county bond automatically results in release.

VIII. On-Site and Video Visitation Rules

Tulsa County provides several ways to visit an inmate. TCSO states that video visitation is provided through a third-party vendor and directs users to JailATM.com for more information. Video visitation allows friends and family with internet access to schedule video visits with someone in the facility. Users should complete vendor registration, confirm the inmate’s identity, check eligibility, and avoid case-related discussion.

On-site non-contact visitation is conducted at the Tulsa County Jail. TCSO limits this service to parents, grandparents, spouses, siblings, fiancé, and children age 16 or older with a legal guardian. Visitors must apply using the visitor request system and review the visitation rules before scheduling. On-site visitation days are Fridays and Saturdays between 8:30 AM and 3:30 PM.

Visitors should expect strict screening. Bring valid identification, arrive prepared, dress conservatively, and leave prohibited items outside. Do not bring weapons, tobacco, vapes, drugs, loose medication, suspicious packages, recording devices, or unnecessary property. If the visit is remote, do not record, screenshot, livestream, rebroadcast, show weapons, show drugs, appear intoxicated, drive during the visit, add unauthorized people, or discuss the criminal case.

Visitation approval warning: Vendor account creation does not guarantee a visit. The inmate may be in court, medical, discipline, housing movement, transfer status, intake, lockdown, or otherwise unavailable. Always verify eligibility and scheduling rules before making travel plans.

IX. Tulsa County Court Records, OSCN & ODCR

The Tulsa County jail search answers the custody question. Oklahoma court records answer the case question. For criminal cases in Tulsa County District Court, users commonly search the Oklahoma State Courts Network, known as OSCN, and may also use On Demand Court Records, known as ODCR. These systems can help locate case numbers, party names, docket entries, court dates, filings, warrants, bonds, pleas, dismissals, and final outcomes when records are available online.

Do not assume the jail charge and court charge will be identical. A person can be booked on an arrest complaint, then prosecutors may file, amend, reduce, enhance, or decline a charge later. Tulsa County also has municipal, district, state, tribal, and federal issues that can confuse users. A Tulsa Police arrest, Tulsa County Sheriff arrest, Oklahoma Highway Patrol arrest, municipal matter, Muscogee Nation jurisdiction issue, or federal Northern District case may point to different systems.

When searching OSCN, use the person’s legal name and narrow by Tulsa County if possible. If you have a case number, search directly by case number. Criminal felony cases commonly use a “CF” format, and criminal misdemeanor cases commonly use a “CM” format, but users should not guess a case type if they do not know it. If the online docket is missing, call or visit the proper court clerk. Online docket information is useful, but certified records and official copies come from the court system.

Court-record workflow:
  1. Use the Tulsa County inmate search to confirm custody and booking ID.
  2. Look for the related charge, arresting agency, and possible case clues.
  3. Search OSCN by party name or case number for Tulsa County District Court records.
  4. Check ODCR if the record is not easily found on OSCN.
  5. Contact the Tulsa County Court Clerk for official copies, certified records, or unclear docket entries.
  6. Use an attorney for legal interpretation; do not treat a jail page as legal advice.

X. Crucial Visitor Tips & Common Mistakes

⚠️ Search Official First

Do not start with a mugshot scraper. Search the Tulsa County Inmate Information Center first, then verify with TCSO if the result affects bond, travel, work, or family decisions.

💸 Do Not Mix Payment Types

Bond, commissary, trust-account deposits, phone funds, video visits, and court costs are separate. Sending money to the wrong system is a preventable mistake.

📦 Mail Rules Are Strict

Cash, personal checks, stamps, stickers, padded envelopes, marker, perfume, explicit photos, gang content, and unauthorized packages can cause rejection or contraband handling.

👔 On-Site Visits Are Limited

On-site visitation is not open to everyone. TCSO limits it to specific family/relationship categories and requires a visitor request process before scheduling.

🏛️ Court Search Is Separate

A DLM booking ID is not a court case number. Use OSCN or ODCR for docket status, hearings, warrants, filings, and final outcomes.

📞 Call Before Property Pickup

The property room has a schedule and requires coordination. Do not drive downtown assuming every item can be released immediately.

XI. Facility Jurisdiction Map

The David L. Moss Criminal Justice Center is located at 300 N. Denver Avenue in downtown Tulsa, Oklahoma. The Tulsa County Courthouse is nearby at 500 S. Denver Avenue, but the jail and courthouse are not the same destination. Before traveling, confirm whether you need jail intake, property pickup, court clerk services, bond information, visitation, or a hearing location.