Comanche County, Oklahoma: Government Structure and Services

Comanche County occupies the southwestern quadrant of Oklahoma, with Lawton serving as the county seat and the region's primary population and commercial center. The county government operates under the statutory framework established by the Oklahoma Constitution and Title 19 of the Oklahoma Statutes, which govern county organization statewide. This page covers the structural composition of Comanche County government, the distribution of administrative authority, service delivery mechanisms, and the boundaries of county jurisdiction relative to state, municipal, and tribal authority.

Definition and scope

Comanche County is one of Oklahoma's 77 counties, established as a political subdivision of the state with defined geographic, fiscal, and administrative functions. The county encompasses approximately 1,069 square miles (U.S. Census Bureau, County Gazetteer) and is home to Fort Sill, a major U.S. Army installation that creates a distinct federal enclave within county boundaries.

County government in Oklahoma does not operate as a home-rule entity by default. Comanche County functions under general-law county authority, meaning its structural powers derive entirely from state statute rather than a locally adopted charter. This contrasts with incorporated municipalities within the county — including Lawton — which may adopt home-rule charters under Article XVIII of the Oklahoma Constitution.

The scope of Comanche County government covers:

Scope limitations: This page addresses Comanche County civil government structures only. Federal jurisdiction over Fort Sill, tribal government authority exercised by the Comanche Nation and other federally recognized tribes within county boundaries, and municipal government within incorporated cities fall outside the county government's administrative purview. For the broader context of Oklahoma county government structure, including how all 77 counties are organized under state statute, that resource covers the statewide framework.

How it works

Comanche County government is administered through three primary elected officials — the Board of County Commissioners — along with a set of additional elected county officers whose authority is independently established by state statute.

Board of County Commissioners

The three-member Board of County Commissioners (BOCC) serves as the county's legislative and executive body. Each commissioner represents a geographic district and is elected to a four-year term (Oklahoma Statutes Title 19, §§ 130.1–131). The BOCC holds authority over:

  1. Adoption of the annual county budget
  2. Maintenance and construction of county roads and bridges
  3. Acquisition and disposal of county property
  4. Approval of contracts binding the county

Elected County Officers

Independent of the BOCC, the following officers are separately elected and hold statutory authority:

  1. County Assessor — determines ad valorem property values for tax purposes
  2. County Clerk — maintains official records, processes deed filings and election documentation
  3. County Treasurer — collects and disburses county funds, manages tax collection
  4. County Sheriff — provides law enforcement in unincorporated areas, operates the county jail, serves civil process
  5. County Court Clerk — administers District Court records under the supervision of the Oklahoma Supreme Court
  6. County Election Board Secretary — conducts elections under the direction of the Oklahoma Election Board
  7. District Attorney — prosecutes criminal matters within the 5th Judicial District, which includes Comanche County

The District Court serving Comanche County operates as Division I of the 5th Judicial District. Judges are elected in nonpartisan elections and the court has jurisdiction over civil, criminal, juvenile, and probate matters.

Common scenarios

Service seekers interacting with Comanche County government most frequently encounter the following functional areas:

Property and taxation: Property owners file homestead exemption claims with the County Assessor's office. Ad valorem tax payments are processed through the County Treasurer. Assessment disputes are directed first to the County Assessor, then to the County Board of Equalization.

Road and infrastructure services: Residents in unincorporated Comanche County submit road maintenance requests to the Commissioner representing their district. County roads are classified separately from state highways maintained by the Oklahoma Department of Transportation.

Law enforcement and detention: The Comanche County Sheriff's Office provides patrol coverage in unincorporated areas. The county jail, operated by the Sheriff's Office, holds pretrial detainees and individuals serving sentences of up to one year under state classification standards.

Vital records and court filings: Deed recordings, mortgage instruments, and land survey plats are filed with the County Clerk. Probate filings, civil suits, and criminal case documents are processed through the District Court Clerk.

Elections: Voter registration, polling place administration, and absentee ballot processing operate through the county Election Board, which functions under state oversight from the Oklahoma Election Board in Oklahoma City.

Decision boundaries

County authority in Comanche County has defined limits that frequently require coordination with or deference to other governmental layers.

County vs. municipal: Within Lawton and other incorporated municipalities, the city government — not the county — holds primary jurisdiction over zoning, building permits, local ordinances, and municipal utilities. County jurisdiction re-asserts for criminal prosecution (through the District Attorney) and for property tax administration regardless of incorporated status.

County vs. state: The County Sheriff enforces both county ordinances and state law, but the Oklahoma Department of Public Safety retains authority over highway patrol functions on state routes. Public health programs in Comanche County are administered through the Oklahoma State Department of Health's Comanche County Health Department, a state agency operating at the local level rather than a county department.

County vs. federal/tribal: Fort Sill occupies federal land subject to U.S. military jurisdiction, removing that acreage from county law enforcement and zoning authority. The Comanche Nation, headquartered in Lawton, exercises sovereign governmental authority over tribal members and tribal trust lands under federal Indian law — a jurisdiction that does not flow through county government. For context on how tribal governance intersects with Oklahoma's county system, the Oklahoma tribal governments reference covers the framework of federally recognized tribal authority statewide.

The Oklahoma Government Authority homepage provides a structured entry point to state, county, municipal, and tribal government resources across Oklahoma, including the administrative agencies that interact with Comanche County operations.

References