Kahului Jail Mugshots

Kahului Jail Mugshots tie to Maui County, not the Honolulu system. The Maui Police Department runs patrol and arrest work for Kahului from its Wailuku headquarters. Inmates go to the Maui Community Correctional Center in Wailuku. To find a booking photo from a Kahului arrest, you start with the county police records unit or the state DPS inmate search. This page walks through each option, shows the right office for each record type, and links to official Maui and Hawaii sources.

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Kahului Overview

Maui County
MCCC Local Jail
~363 Daily Pop
301 Jail Capacity

The Maui County Police Department runs patrol for Kahului. The HQ sits at 55 Mahalani Street, Wailuku, HI 96793. The Records Section phone is (808) 244-6400. Kahului is the commercial and transport hub of Maui, with the airport and main harbor inside city limits. That mix drives a steady arrest load for the Maui PD patrol unit assigned to the area.

Maui PD is also an official Public Access Site. You can walk in and ask for a print of an adult conviction record. Each print is $25. The office does not hand out booking photos at the counter. Those go through a separate records request.

MCCC and Kahului Inmates

Arrests made in Kahului go to the Maui Community Correctional Center in Wailuku. MCCC is at 600 Waiale Road, Wailuku, HI 96793. The phone is (808) 243-5858. The site holds both male and female inmates. It handles pre-trial detention and sentences of up to one year.

Kahului Jail Mugshots Maui Community Correctional Center

The site runs well above its rated capacity. The cap is 301. The daily count runs around 363.

Annual bookings run between 2,200 and 2,400. About 58 percent of the daily count are pre-trial. The rest are sentenced or wait to be sentenced. Felonies drive 53 percent of charges. Misdemeanors drive 37 percent. The rest are traffic and other low-level charges. The Maui Intake Service Center at 1797 Wili Pa Loop, Wailuku, handles the first screen when a person comes through the door. The number is (808) 243-5008.

Kahului Records Requests

To get a booking photo tied to a Kahului arrest, you file a UIPA request with Maui County. The County of Maui public records page has the form and fee schedule. You can also use the new online portal at https://mauicountyhi.govqa.us/WEBAPP/_rs/ to submit and track a request. The Office of Council Services is at (808) 270-7838 or ocs.request@mauicounty.us.

Kahului Jail Mugshots Maui County public records

The portal covers the Maui Police Department, Fire, Emergency Management, Mayor's Office, and other key agencies under one sign-in.

Fees break out like this. Search time runs $2.50 per 15 minutes. Review and segregation time runs $5 per 15 minutes. Duplication is $0.25 per page. The first $30 of fees is waived. The first $60 can be waived when the record request serves the public interest.

Note: Maui County answers most UIPA requests within 10 business days. A hard request can run up to 20 business days with a delay notice sent back to you.

Two state tools cover Kahului inmates. The first is the Hawaii DPS Inmate Search. You can search by name, date of birth, or offender ID. Results show the facility, custody status, and offender number. The second is the Hawaii SAVIN VINE system. Sign up for alerts by name. VINE sends push notices on moves, releases, and court dates.

Both tools pull from the same OffenderTrak database. That keeps them in sync with the live status at MCCC. The booking photo attached to the record stays tied to the file across every move.

Kahului Court Cases

Felony cases out of Kahului go to the Second Circuit Court at Hoapili Hale. That court is at 2145 Main Street, Wailuku, HI 96793. The phone is (808) 244-2800. The Wailuku District Court handles misdemeanor and traffic cases. You can search either court's case file through the eCourt Kokua system.

The eCourt tool shows charges, case number, hearing dates, and disposition. It is free to run a guest search.

Kahului Jail Mugshots and UIPA

The Uniform Information Practices Act is Hawaii's public records law. It lives at HRS Chapter 92F. Section 92F-12(a)(13) makes inmate info public. Section 92F-12(a)(5) makes arrest info public. The Office of Information Practices handles appeals.

HRS Chapter 846 is the companion law that sets up the state's criminal history repository. Section 846-9 makes conviction info public and keeps non-conviction info out of public reach.

Conviction Records for Kahului

For a full conviction record tied to a Kahului arrest, go to the Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center. The office is in Honolulu at 465 S. King Street, Room 102. Phone: (808) 587-3279. The eCrim portal costs $5 per search and $12 per official record. Paper name checks cost $30. The Maui PD walk-in print at 55 Mahalani Street costs $25.

The HCJDC Criminal History Records Check page has the forms and steps. You pick name-based or fingerprint-based. Fingerprint checks run $55 and give the most accurate match.

Kahului Jail Mugshots Retention

Kahului arrest records carry set retention rules under state policy. A felony conviction record stays in the file forever. A misdemeanor conviction runs at least 10 years. A traffic conviction runs 5 to 10 years. An arrest with no conviction stays in the file for at least 5 years. Juvenile records are sealed at age 18 in most cases. The booking photo and the fingerprint card stay with the record for the life of the file.

A redacted copy hides names, home addresses, phone numbers, dates of birth, social security numbers, and medical info. Your own info stays in when you request your own record. The state follows these rules across every agency that holds Kahului arrest data, from the police station to the jail to HCJDC.

Under state law, only an agency that holds the record has to answer a UIPA request. A third party that has a copy does not. That rule keeps record control with the office that owns the file.

Start with the state DPS tool for any live lookup. It is free. It is fast. A partial name works. From there, check the HPD or county police log for recent arrests. For older cases, go to eCrim and pull a conviction history by name. Each step adds more data without a big fee.

Keep your request clear and short. Give the full legal name. Add the date of birth if you know it. Add the offender ID if you have it. The offender ID gives the cleanest match since names can repeat across the system. The agency can work faster when the request is tight.

Sign up for VINE alerts when you want passive tracking. Set the phone or email. The system will push alerts when something changes. That saves you from calling the jail or pulling the inmate search day after day.

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