‘Fake Attorney’ Jail Visit Story Highlights Oklahoma’s False Personation Laws
Is it illegal to impersonate an attorney in Oklahoma? Maybe. Recent reports say an Oklahoma City man allegedly posed as an attorney to gain access to the attorney-visitor area at the Oklahoma County Detention Center to see his girlfriend. Local coverage indicates he sought to have power-of-attorney paperwork signed and that detention staff later admitted a verification lapse. The man reportedly characterized the incident as a “silly misunderstanding.”
What law could apply? A quick look at 21 O.S. § 1533 (False Personation)
Oklahoma’s false-personation statute makes it a crime to falsely personate certain officials or “any private individual having special authority by law to perform any act affecting the rights or interests of another,” and then, in that assumed character, do any act whereby another is injured, defrauded, harassed, vexed, or annoyed. The statute sets misdemeanor and felony tiers and also addresses “sham legal process.”
- Misdemeanor tier (likely the focal point here): Falsely personating covered roles (including a “private individual having special authority by law…”) and, in that assumed character, doing any act that injures/defrauds/harasses/etc. carries up to 6 months in jail and up to a $2,000 fine.
- Felony tiers (when “sham legal process” or other listed conduct is involved): If the person falsely personates a public officer or law enforcement officer in connection with a “sham legal process,” or asserts authority of law not provided by law, penalties rise to a felony (up to 2 years and a $5,000 fine). The statute also includes other felony scenarios (e.g., specific misuse of marked vehicles).
Does § 1533 reach someone posing as an attorney?
Often, yes—under the statute’s “private individual having special authority by law” clause. Attorneys are granted authority by law to act on clients’ rights and interests (appear in court, give legal advice, manage case strategy, interface with the justice system). Section 1533 may include private individuals with special legal authority (notaries, process servers, and— logically—attorneys), subject to the “act” requirement (someone is injured/defrauded/harassed/vexed/annoyed in that assumed character).
Key caveat: Subsections (B)–(D) about “sham legal process” mainly target false personation of public officers or falsely asserting legal authority via sham court-like documents. A power-of-attorney form is typically a private instrument (often notarized), not a court order or “sham legal process” as defined in §1533(H). So, on publicly available facts, the felony “sham legal process” prongs may not fit unless additional evidence shows fake court documents or false official orders.
Bottom line for this incident: If prosecutors can prove the person falsely claimed to be an attorney (a “private individual having special authority by law”) and, in that role, did an act that meets the “injured/defrauded/harassed/vexed/annoyed” element—for example, obtaining secured access or causing jail staff to alter procedures — §1533(A) misdemeanor false personation is a plausible charge. The felony “sham legal process” provisions would generally require more than presenting ordinary paperwork.
Could other laws be in play?
- False Personation (other sections): Some false-personation statutes require pretending to be a specific real person, which may not match allegations that someone merely played the role of “an attorney” in general. Model jury instructions and related resources distinguish “falsely assuming the identity of another person” from role-based personation.
- Unauthorized Practice of Law (UPL): Oklahoma regulates law practice through Title 5 and bar rules, but the unauthorized practice of law (UPL) is not a specific crime with its own statute
Important: Allegations in media are not proof. Each case turns on evidence (statements, video, sign-in logs, ID checks, whether any “act” under §1533(A) can be shown, etc.).
Facing a False-Personation Charge in Oklahoma? Here’s What to Know.
False personation cases often hinge on exactly what was said or implied, which role was allegedly assumed, whether any person was “injured/defrauded/harassed/vexed/annoyed,” and whether any documents qualify as a “sham legal process.” We routinely scrutinize body-cam and facility video, visitor logs, sworn statements, and the timeline. We also analyze whether the charged subsection of §1533 actually fits the facts — especially when the alleged personation involves attorneys (private individuals with special authority) versus public officers like police.
Call The Urbanic Law Firm if you’re under investigation or charged. Early legal intervention can protect your rights and preserve key evidence.
FAQs: False Personation (21 O.S. § 1533) in Oklahoma
What is “false personation” under 21 O.S. § 1533?
It generally means pretending to be a covered official (public officer, law enforcement, firefighter/EMT) or a private individual with special legal authority (e.g., an attorney or notary), and then doing an act in that assumed character that injures, defrauds, harasses, vexes, or annoys another.
Is pretending to be a lawyer enough for § 1533?
Possibly — if the State proves both (1) false personation of a role covered by § 1533 (an attorney fits the “private individual having special authority by law” clause) and (2) an act in that assumed character meeting the statute’s “injury/defraud/harass/vex/annoy” element (e.g., obtaining restricted access).
When does false personation become a felony?
Felony exposure typically arises with sham legal process (fake court-like documents or false assertion of law’s authority) or certain vehicle/“State Police” scenarios spelled out in the statute.
Is a power-of-attorney form “sham legal process”?
Not usually. § 1533(H) defines “sham legal process” as documents that purport to be court orders/warrants or to assert jurisdiction/authority. A private POA isn’t a court order. Facts matter—the content and use of the document will control.
What defenses might apply?
Common defenses include lack of false personation (no claim of being covered role), absence of the required “act” and impact, no sham legal process, mistaken identity, and suppressed statements if Miranda/voluntariness is at issue. Case strategy is evidence-driven.
Contact The Urbanic Law Firm
If you’ve been charged with a false personation or any other criminal offense in Oklahoma, contact The Urbanic Law Firm today. Call 405-633-3420 or fill out our form.
Based in Oklahoma City and serving clients statewide.





