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The Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation's budget is generated primarily by annual appropriations from the Oklahoma Legislature. [5] Annual appropriations make up 43% ($27.4 million), 39% generated from the fees charged by the Bureau ($24.4 million), and the remaining 18% ($11.7 million) coming from various other sources.
A. DeWade Langley was a director of the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, having serving in that position from 1995 until his retirement in 2010.. Hired by the state agency as a special agent in 1977, Langley also served as a deputy inspector, inspector, and deputy director, before becoming director.
Then in 2013 was selected as the 26th Chief of the Oklahoma Highway Patrol serving with distinction in that position until retiring from the patrol in 2018 and accepting a position as the Deputy Director for the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation (OSBI). On July 1, 2018, Adams was chosen as the Director of the OSBI by unanimous vote of the ...
Director, State Bureau of Investigation Ricky G. Adams: 2018 Director, State Bureau of Narcotics Donnie Anderson 2020 Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Eric Pfeifer 2011 Executive Director, Council on Law Enforcement Education and Training J. Morrison (Acting) 2017 Director, Department of Corrections Scott Crow 2019
The Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation revealed in new court records that a chest freezer was found during the excavation and opened. Inside were the bodies of Veronica Butler and Jilian ...
Steven Harpe, director of the Oklahoma Department of Corrections, is pictured this year in his office in Oklahoma City. How Oklahoma is trying to change the culture in state prisons.
Humphrey told The Oklahoman he has contacted the department, Attorney General Gentner Drummond, the governor, the Senate pro tem and the House speaker, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the ...
The new bureau was placed under the direct command of the Governor of Oklahoma. In the late 1960s, narcotics operations and drug-related crimes accelerated. Despite a merger into the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation (OSBI) in 1968, only one full-time narcotics agent was employed by the state. Recognizing this problem, the Legislature ...