City and vertical

Criminal defense software for Oklahoma City practitioners.

Oklahoma City defense work runs through Oklahoma County Court Clerk, Oklahoma City Municipal Court, U.S. District Court: Western District of Oklahoma, OSCN context, Oklahoma criminal procedure, and Oklahoma Bar professional responsibility.

Quick answer

Legal Core in Oklahoma City

Legal Core is Butler Solutions' criminal defense software surface for Oklahoma City practices. It supports matter intake, calendars, discovery and motion packet context, sensitive-record organization, task ownership, client communication records, and migration from Clio, MyCase, Smokeball, PracticePanther, or Filevine. Oklahoma City fit depends on Oklahoma County Court Clerk, Oklahoma City Municipal Court, U.S. District Court: Western District of Oklahoma, Oklahoma Statutes Title 22, OSCN court-record context, Oklahoma Bar ethics resources, and expungement/sealing workflow under Title 22 section 18. Legal Core does not calculate legal deadlines, file directly with courts, generate official court forms, or replace attorney review. Pricing is $99, $149, $199, or custom by user count, with a 2-month free trial and migration support.

Legal Core in Oklahoma City

Vertical-specific, city-specific, and scoped to what the product actually supports.

This page is narrower than the Oklahoma City city hub and the Oklahoma Legal Core page. It is for defense practices evaluating how Legal Core maps to Oklahoma County and municipal criminal work.

OSCN, local court records, Oklahoma criminal procedure, and expungement context are treated as practitioner-reviewed workflow context. Butler does not claim direct filing, court-record, or legal-deadline automation.

Oklahoma City regulatory landscape

The local rules and sources that shape the Legal Core evaluation.

Oklahoma City defense software evaluation should account for Oklahoma County felony work, municipal court matters, federal case context, OSCN references, and Oklahoma professional responsibility.

01

Oklahoma County and municipal courts

Oklahoma County Court Clerk and Oklahoma City Municipal Court are the local anchors for felony, misdemeanor, municipal, and record-tracking context. Legal Core can organize matter status, court-date notes, filings, documents, and review ownership without claiming court integration.

02

Oklahoma criminal procedure

Oklahoma Statutes Title 22 and OSCN resources frame discovery, motion, expungement, and criminal-procedure references. Legal Core treats these as attorney-reviewed workflow fields, not automatic deadline calculation or legal advice.

03

Federal and appellate context

U.S. District Court: Western District of Oklahoma and Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals context matter for some Oklahoma City defense practices. Legal Core keeps state, municipal, and federal matter context separated so migration and active-case review do not flatten jurisdictional differences.

04

Professional responsibility and sensitive records

Oklahoma Bar Association, Oklahoma Rules of Professional Conduct, and MCLE context frame confidentiality, technology review, and professional judgment. Legal Core can organize sensitive records and review notes, but lawyers remain responsible for ethics and court obligations.

Workflow specificity

How Legal Core maps to Oklahoma City operating work.

Legal Core maps to Oklahoma City defense operations by organizing matters, court context, packets, sensitive records, and migration without unsupported automation claims.

01

Matter intake and court routing

Legal Core can keep client, charge, court, assigned attorney, next event, custody context, and review notes together. It does not decide venue, appearance requirements, or filing obligations.

02

Discovery and motion packet workflow

Practices can organize discovery requests, suppression materials, dismissal packets, hearing notes, and evidence references around attorney review. Legal Core does not generate official filings or calculate statutory deadlines.

03

Sealing and expungement context

Title 22 section 18 references can be tracked as matter context, document checklists, and responsible-attorney review. Eligibility, filing, and sealing strategy remain attorney decisions.

04

Federal and municipal separation

Oklahoma City practices can keep municipal, Oklahoma County, and Western District matters separated during intake and migration. The product does not connect directly to OSCN or federal court systems.

05

Parallel migration review

Oklahoma City firms moving from Clio, MyCase, Smokeball, PracticePanther, or Filevine can use the Legal Core trial period for a parallel run. Active matters, calendars, contacts, documents, tasks, notes, and custom fields are reviewed before cutover.

Pricing and programs

Uniform pricing, city-specific evaluation.

Legal Core uses Butler's uniform pricing structure: Starter at $99 per user per month, Small Team at $149 per user per month, Firm at $199 per user per month, and custom pricing above 25 users. Legal Core includes a 2-month free trial. Each product has a founding cohort with 100 spots and 25% off for 2 years, plus an application-based design partner program with 10 spots per product.

Migration

Migration support for Oklahoma City Legal Core teams.

Legal Core migration follows Butler's existing migration program. Founding cohort customers receive migration free. Standard cloud-to-cloud migration is $499 for typical scope up to 5,000 records. Complex migration is $1,499 for multi-source histories, large document libraries, or unusual source structures. Migration fees are credited back as platform credit after 6 months of paid subscription.

  • Clio
  • MyCase
  • Smokeball
  • PracticePanther
  • Filevine
Review migration

Oklahoma City Legal Core FAQ

City-specific questions before implementation.

Does Legal Core work for Oklahoma City criminal defense practices?

Yes. Legal Core is built for defense practices that need structured intake, matters, calendars, documents, tasks, sensitive-record handling, and migration review in an Oklahoma City operating context.

Does Legal Core integrate directly with OSCN?

No direct OSCN integration is claimed. OSCN is cited as court-record and procedural context. Legal Core organizes practitioner-side workflow and review materials.

Which courts shape Oklahoma City Legal Core implementation?

Oklahoma County Court Clerk, Oklahoma City Municipal Court, and U.S. District Court: Western District of Oklahoma are the main public court references. Local practice remains attorney-reviewed.

Does Legal Core calculate Oklahoma criminal deadlines?

No. Oklahoma criminal procedure and local court references are workflow context. Attorneys remain responsible for deadline calculation, court orders, and filing obligations.

Can Legal Core handle expungement or sealing workflow?

Legal Core can track matter context, documents, notes, and attorney review around Title 22 section 18. It does not decide eligibility or file expungement petitions.

Can Oklahoma City firms migrate from Clio or MyCase?

Yes, where usable exports or records are available. Migration review identifies active matters, contacts, calendars, documents, notes, tasks, billing context, and custom fields before cutover.

Does Legal Core generate Oklahoma court forms?

No automatic form generation is claimed. Court forms and filing packets can be tracked as practitioner-reviewed document workflow.

How does Legal Core handle sensitive defense records?

Legal Core can organize restricted documents, notes, review status, and task ownership. Lawyers remain responsible for confidentiality, privilege, sealing, and disclosure decisions.

Is Legal Core pricing different in Oklahoma City?

No. Pricing is not city-specific. Legal Core uses Butler's uniform per-user pricing, trial, founding cohort, and migration terms.

Where should a Oklahoma City defense practice start?

Start with Legal Core pricing if user count, trial period, and migration terms are the main questions. Use contact for Oklahoma County workflow, OSCN context, or migration scoping.

Public sources cited

City and vertical claims stay tied to public sources.

City and vertical information cited from public sources current as of May 5, 2026. Butler updates city+vertical content as court, licensing, and local practice sources change. The source set combines local city and county authorities with matching state-level Legal Core authorities where those sources support the city-specific claims above.

Oklahoma City Legal Core evaluation

Review pricing or talk through the local workflow.

Use pricing if the main question is user count, trial period, founding cohort, or migration terms. Use contact if the question is local court fit, source-system migration, or implementation scope.