CCW permits don't get much attention, compared to drivers licenses.
They do in Texas. State law requires notifying the officer that you have a CHL if stopped.
You miss the point. Yeah, cops everywhere pay attention to armed citizens. However, carry permits get very little attention by the general public and state legislatures. And it's more broad than just the permit. The laws regarding motor vehicles and the accompanying judicial precedents are far more extensive than those regarding concealed carry. Everyone drives and all the stupid things people can do with cars are done every day. Only a small portion of people carry and generally fewer stupid things are done with those firearms. Consequently, firearms law is typically less refined.
You either have a valid permit or you dont.
That is correct. But determining whether your OK permit is valid once you leave OK does not appear to be a line item in the statutes. Unless there is no case history in the courts or a line item in the statutes, it is up to the interpretation of whoever determines to arrest and prosecute you. If the OP had a statute to reference, he would not have asked the question.
If the OP's Oklahoma permit is invalid once he is no longer a resident of Oklahoma.
You're missing the point again. He wants to know if this is true. The OP does not know. Unless you have some magical insight, neither do you.
Actually Oklahoma's SDA says you have a certain amount of time to have get a new one due to change of address. And if you are not in Oklahoma then I am sure yours would not be valid.
Well, since you're a lawyer specializing in OK firearms policy, we're all better informed now. Because you'e "sure".
You posted previously that OK does NOT issue out-of-state licenses. Ergo, they issue only to OK residents. Once you relocate to Texas you are a resident of Texas and not Oklahoma, so your OK license is invalid.
But once the permit is issued, the act has been undertaken. I could argue that it was "issued" to an OK resident and now possessed by a non-resident. Semantics cuts both ways.
There are a lot of pointless comments here. The OP asked a question. I, among others, gave nebulous advice. No one has yet pointed to the law. In general, we all *think* his OK permit is now invalid. But we can only guess. He could call up the state attorney general for OK and find out this has happened before and they grandfather people in until the permit expires. But we all suspect not. But our suspicion is just that. No one here has come up with the answer.