The Del City Police Department serves a municipality of roughly 4,000 residents in Oklahoma County, operating as an independent agency distinct from Oklahoma City Police. Understanding how this department functions, where to reach it, and what services it provides matters if you live in or frequently move through Del City's incorporated boundaries.
Del City occupies a roughly 7-square-mile area east of Oklahoma City, bordered by Tinker Air Force Base to the south and east. The police department's authority extends only within Del City's municipal limits. If you experience a crime or emergency outside these boundaries, you'll contact the Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office or Oklahoma City Police depending on location. This distinction affects response times and which agency takes your report. Tinker Air Force Base, while physically adjacent, operates under federal law enforcement jurisdiction through its own security personnel.
The department maintains a single police station located at 4528 Sunnyside Road in Del City. This is the address for all non-emergency matters, including filing reports, requesting records, or speaking with an officer about city ordinance violations.
Non-emergency calls go to (405) 733-7742. For emergencies anywhere in Del City, dial 911; dispatch will route your call appropriately. The non-emergency line handles situations like noise complaints, minor traffic accidents with no injuries, suspicious activity that poses no immediate threat, and requests for police reports. Response times for non-emergency calls typically range from 30 minutes to several hours depending on officer availability and incident priority, though the department does not publicly publish specific service-level agreements.
You can file a report in person at the Sunnyside Road station during business hours or request a report by phone for minor incidents like theft from a vehicle or package theft. Some reports can now be filed online through the city's website, though property crime reports generally require phone or in-person filing to gather details about what was taken and when the incident occurred.
Oklahoma's public records law grants broad access to police records with specific exceptions. You can request accident reports, incident summaries, and arrest records through the Del City Police Department. Requests typically take 3 to 5 business days, though more complex records requests may take longer. Accident reports cost approximately $7 to $10 per report. Contact the Records Section directly at the main station number to specify what you need.
The department does not maintain a public crime statistics portal on its website. For detailed crime data broken down by neighborhood or type of offense, you'll need to request reports directly or consult the FBI's Uniform Crime Reporting Program, which includes aggregated data from participating agencies including smaller Oklahoma municipalities.
Del City Police enforce traffic laws within city limits on municipal streets and state highways that pass through the city (notably parts of Sunnyside Road and Tinker Boulevard). The department issues citations for speeding, failure to stop, and other violations. If you receive a citation in Del City, payment and court date information appear on the ticket itself. You can pay online through the City of Del City website or by mail. Traffic court sessions occur monthly, and you have the right to request a court date rather than paying the fine.
Driving through Del City's residential areas during morning and afternoon hours (roughly 7 to 9 a.m. and 3 to 5 p.m.) means higher visibility from school crossing enforcement, particularly near Del City High School on Douglas Boulevard.
The Del City Police Department is staffed at levels typical for a municipality its size. The department does not maintain specialized units like a major crimes task force or narcotics team; those functions fall to the Oklahoma County Sheriff's Office or the Oklahoma City Police Department. If you need assistance with animal control, the city contracts this service rather than handling it through police.
The department participates in the Oklahoma County Law Enforcement Network, which allows officers from different agencies in the region to coordinate on cases that cross jurisdictional lines. If a suspect flees Del City into unincorporated Oklahoma County or Oklahoma City proper, the department coordinates with those agencies to maintain continuity of investigation.
If you live in Del City and need routine police services, expect to interact with the department primarily through non-emergency calls or in-person visits. The single station means geographic coverage is efficient but also means the department cannot maintain high visibility across all neighborhoods simultaneously. Response to calls depends on what officers are currently available and where they are deployed.
For residents near Tinker Boulevard, understand that federal law enforcement from Tinker Air Force Base does not routinely patrol civilian areas in Del City, so city police handle standard patrol duties regardless of proximity to the base. If you live adjacent to Tinker property, questions about boundary lines or enforcement should go to Del City Police.
Business owners in Del City can request regular patrol in commercial areas or discuss security concerns with the police department. The city has a small downtown corridor along Sunnyside Road where businesses can coordinate with officers about after-hours monitoring.
Bottom line: Contact Del City Police at (405) 733-7742 for non-emergency matters within city limits, visit their Sunnyside Road station for reports and records, and understand that their services are limited to the 7-square-mile municipality. For crimes involving suspects who may have fled Del City or for specialized investigation services, expect coordination with county or Oklahoma City agencies.
