Search Kailua Jail Mugshots

Kailua Jail Mugshots come from bookings logged by the HPD Kailua Substation and the Windward patrol units that serve this side of Oahu. The town is also home to two state-run lockups: the Women's Community Correctional Center and the Hawaii Youth Correctional Facility. This page shows how to look up a recent arrest, find a current inmate, and reach the right Kailua office for booking records. It also lists local police and court contacts so you can move fast on each request.

Search Public Records

Sponsored Results

Kailua Overview

4 HPD District
~150 WCCC Beds
OCCC Male Jail
HYCF Youth

Kailua Substation and Jail Mugshots

Kailua sits inside HPD District 4, the Windward side. The HPD District 4 page lists the Kailua Substation at 219 Kuulei Road, Kailua, HI 96734. Phone: (808) 723-8838. Fax: (808) 723-8887. Officers here handle arrests in Kailua town, Lanikai, Enchanted Lake, and the nearby coast. District 4 also covers Kaneohe and the far Windward stretch up to Kahuku. Patrol logs and field reports from Kailua beats feed into the same county-wide HPD system.

Kailua Jail Mugshots police substation

The Kailua substation is a walk-in point for local reports but does not release booking photos.

All adult arrests tied to Kailua show up in the daily HPD arrest log. The log runs for 14 days online. It lists date of arrest, name, age, sex, race, the charge, and the arresting officer. It does not show the mugshot. For the photo itself, you have to write the HPD Records and Identification Division at 801 South Beretania Street, Honolulu, HI 96813.

Note: The Kailua Substation does not keep a public mugshot page. All photo requests go through HPD Records at Alapai headquarters in Honolulu.

Women's Community Correctional Center Kailua

The Women's Community Correctional Center sits in Kailua at 42-477 Kalanianaole Highway, Kailua, HI 96734. Phone: (808) 266-9587. WCCC is the only all-female lockup in the state. The warden is Ione Guillonta. The facility holds pre-trial and sentenced women from all four counties. The site has about 150 beds and works as both a jail and a prison. Women from Maui, Hawaii Island, and Kauai who get time beyond what their local lockup can hold get moved here.

Kailua Jail Mugshots Women's Community Correctional Center

WCCC runs programs in substance abuse, parenting, cognitive skills, and job training.

The Hawaii DPS Inmate Search is the fastest way to confirm if a woman is held at WCCC. The tool takes a full or partial name, a date of birth, or an offender ID. Results show the site, status, and offender number. Booking photos tied to state custody live in the OffenderTrak file and flow through the same search.

Visits at WCCC run on set days. Call ahead to book. Two adult visitors at a time. Kids count as visitors. Bring a valid photo ID. Dress code is strict. Contraband rules match the rest of the state system. No money on your person. Use the facility lobby kiosk or mail in a money order.

Hawaii Youth Correctional Facility Kailua

The Hawaii Youth Correctional Facility is next door at 42-470 Kalanianaole Highway, Kailua, HI 96734. Phone: (808) 266-9500. HYCF is the only state-run youth lockup. It holds juveniles sent by the family court. Youth records are not public. HRS § 571-84 and UIPA rules keep juvenile arrest, court, and placement info sealed. You cannot get a juvenile mugshot from HYCF, HPD, or the state.

Kailua Jail Mugshots Hawaii Youth Correctional Facility

Parents and legal guardians can ask HYCF staff about their own child's status, but info stays inside that tight circle.

For a youth case that moves to adult court, the rules shift. Once a case is waived up to circuit court, the record opens to the public. Booking at that point goes through OCCC for men or WCCC for women, and the photo becomes part of the public state record.

Kailua has no local holding cell open to the public for booking photos. Men arrested in Kailua go to the Oahu Community Correctional Center at 2199 Kamehameha Highway, Honolulu, HI 96819, phone (808) 832-1777. Women go to WCCC right in town. The booking photo is taken at intake and loaded into OffenderTrak. The same photo moves with the person through any later move to Halawa or another state site.

Pre-trial release on Oahu often runs through the Intake Service Centers. Bail comes in cash, bond, or supervised release. A first appearance can happen within 48 hours. Kailua arrestees who bond out still have a booking photo on file. That photo stays with the DPS system until case close.

  • Adult men: OCCC, Honolulu
  • Adult women: WCCC, Kailua
  • Youth: HYCF, Kailua (records sealed)
  • Federal arrests: FDC Honolulu

Note: Booking photos from Kailua arrests stay in the state OffenderTrak file. HPD Records in Honolulu handles all public photo requests.

Kailua District Court and Circuit Cases

Kailua cases move through the Kaneohe District Court for misdemeanor and traffic. The site is at 45-939 Pookela Street, Kaneohe, HI 96744. The clerk holds the public case files and can pull a file for review. Felonies from Kailua go to the First Circuit Court in downtown Honolulu. Use eCourt Kokua to look up a case by name or case number. The tool lists filings, hearing dates, and outcomes.

Family court cases tied to Kailua juveniles run out of the First Circuit family court. Those files are closed. Only a party to the case or their counsel can view them. The court does not release juvenile booking info to the public under any search.

For small claims or civil cases tied to the Kailua area, eCourt Kokua is the right tool. Search is free. Copies cost $0.50 per page. Certified copies cost $1.00 per page plus the clerk's certification fee.

Criminal History for Kailua Residents

An official state record comes from the Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center. HCJDC is at 465 S. King Street, Room 102, Honolulu, HI 96813. Phone: (808) 587-3279. The office runs name and fingerprint checks for the whole state. HRS § 846-9 makes conviction data public. Non-conviction info stays sealed. That is why an arrest from Kailua that did not end in a guilty finding will not show up on a standard state check.

The online eCrim portal at ecrim.ehawaii.gov runs $5 per name search and $12 for an official record. On-site checks at HCJDC cost $30 per name on paper. Each HCJDC Public Access Site printout is $25. The closest site for Kailua residents is HPD headquarters in Honolulu.

For release alerts, sign up through Hawaii SAVIN VINE. Pick Hawaii. Enter a name or ID. Add a phone or email. VINE pushes a note when the person moves, bonds out, or is set for release from WCCC or any other state site.

Kailua Public Records Requests

Hawaii public records run under the Uniform Information Practices Act. The HRS Chapter 92F sets the baseline. Section 92F-12(a)(13) says current inmate info is public. Section 92F-12(a)(5) says arrest info is public. The Office of Information Practices gives free guidance on how to file a records request. OIP also keeps a bank of opinions that touch on police logs, jail rosters, and mugshot release.

For a Kailua-specific report, the HPD Records Division at 801 South Beretania Street is the right stop. Office hours: Monday through Friday, 7:45 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Fees: $0.50 for the first page of a plain copy, $0.25 per added page, $0.65 per color page, $1.00 for a verification letter first page. Payment: cash, check, or cashier's check to the City and County of Honolulu. No debit or credit cards.

Nearby Oahu Cities

Kailua sits right next to other Windward towns in Honolulu County. Use the links below for booking info in each.

Search Records Now

Sponsored Results