Kaneohe Arrest Records
Kaneohe Jail Mugshots tie back to arrests made by HPD District 4 officers working the Windward side of Oahu. The Kaneohe Police Station is the main walk-in point for the town. This page walks through the booking path, the right office for each record, and the online tools that help you find a recent photo or check an inmate. Kaneohe is the largest Windward town, and the volume of arrest activity here runs higher than most other District 4 beats.
Kaneohe Overview
Kaneohe Police Station and Jail Mugshots
The HPD District 4 page lists the Kaneohe Police Station at 45-270 Waikalua Road, Kaneohe, HI 96744. Phone: (808) 723-8640. Fax: (808) 723-8886. This is the main stop for District 4 and also holds the watch commander desk for the Windward zone. The station also serves Ahuimanu, Kahaluu, Waiahole, and Heeia. The Kahuku Substation at 56-470 Kamehameha Highway, Kahuku, HI 96731, phone (808) 723-8650, covers the far north stretch of the district.
Local patrol reports from Kaneohe feed into the county-wide HPD arrest log. That log runs on the main HPD site for 14 days and then rolls off.
For the daily HPD arrest log, you can check the web or walk in to the Alapai headquarters security post on South Beretania Street. The log lists name, age, sex, race, the charge, and the arresting officer. It does not carry the booking photo. The photo lives with HPD Records at headquarters.
Note: The Kaneohe Police Station does not release booking photos at its front desk. All photo and report requests route through HPD Records in downtown Honolulu.
Kaneohe Arrests and OCCC Booking
Adult men arrested in Kaneohe go to the Oahu Community Correctional Center at 2199 Kamehameha Highway, Honolulu, HI 96819. Phone: (808) 832-1777. OCCC is the largest jail in the state with about 950 rated beds and a daily count that runs closer to 1,100 to 1,300. Intake takes name, date of birth, fingerprints, and the booking photo. That photo flows straight into the state OffenderTrak file. Women go to the Women's Community Correctional Center right in Kailua.
OCCC holds pre-trial men from across Oahu and some sentenced felons in the reintegration program.
Visits at OCCC run Monday through Sunday from 7:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. except state holidays. Call (808) 832-1633 between 9 a.m. and 12 p.m. to book. Two visitors at a time. Each slot is 30 minutes. Check in 15 minutes early. For inmate cash, the Business Office Window takes cash up to $60 per day from immediate family in the first 30 days.
Kaneohe Jail Mugshots Inmate Search
The Hawaii DPS Inmate Search is the fastest tool for a current inmate check. The tool takes full or partial name, date of birth, or offender ID. Results show the site (OCCC, Halawa, Saguaro in Arizona, WCCC), custody status, and offender number. The booking photo from Kaneohe arrests lives in OffenderTrak and links to the same offender ID through the course of the case.
DPS does not post mugshots to the public search tool. To get a photo you file a records request with HPD or DPS.
For movement and release alerts, use Hawaii SAVIN VINE. Pick Hawaii. Enter a name or ID. Add a phone or email. VINE pushes a note when the person moves, posts bond, or gets set for release. VINE pulls from the same OffenderTrak file so the match stays in sync with the jail roster.
Kaneohe District Court
Misdemeanor and traffic cases from Kaneohe run through the Kaneohe District Court at 45-939 Pookela Street, Kaneohe, HI 96744. The clerk keeps the public case files. Felonies from the Windward side go to the First Circuit Court in downtown Honolulu. Use eCourt Kokua to pull up a case by name, case number, or citation. The free tool lists filings, hearing dates, and disposition.
Copies of case files run $0.50 per page at the clerk. Certified copies cost $1.00 per page plus the clerk's stamp fee. Juvenile cases from Kaneohe run through the family court and stay closed to the public. That covers arrest, intake, and any youth placement.
Marine Corps Base Hawaii at Kaneohe Bay sits in the area. Off-base incidents tied to service members still fall under HPD. On-base cases run through military police and the Naval Criminal Investigative Service. Those files are not part of the HPD log.
- Kaneohe District Court: misdemeanor, traffic, small claims
- First Circuit Court: felony, civil over $40,000
- Family Court: juvenile, divorce, child welfare
- Federal District Court: federal crimes, MCBH off-base
Kaneohe Criminal History Checks
For an official conviction record, go through 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 statewide name and fingerprint checks. HRS § 846-9 makes conviction data public. The HRS Chapter 846 lays out the rest of the framework, including the role of HCJDC.
Online, use eCrim. A basic search costs $5. An official record costs $12. On paper at the HCJDC office, a name check is $30. Each Public Access Site printout runs $25. The closest site to Kaneohe is HPD headquarters at 801 South Beretania Street. Fingerprint checks cost more and need a live-scan appointment.
Note: A Kaneohe arrest that ended without a conviction will not show up on a standard state name check. HRS § 846-9 keeps non-conviction info sealed for public searches.
Kaneohe Records Requests Under UIPA
Hawaii public records run under the Uniform Information Practices Act. The HRS Chapter 92F is the full text. Section 92F-12(a)(13) makes current inmate info public. Section 92F-12(a)(5) makes arrest info public. The Office of Information Practices gives free help on how to word a request. OIP also posts opinions that touch on logs, rosters, and mugshots.
For a Kaneohe police report, write the HPD Records Division at 801 South Beretania Street. Hours: Monday through Friday, 7:45 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Call (808) 723-3258 for status. Plain copy fee: $0.50 for the first page and $0.25 per added page. Color copy: $0.65 per page. Verification letter: $1.00 for the first page. Payment: cash, check, or cashier's check to City and County of Honolulu.
Reports go out only after the case is closed. HPD redacts personal info from public copies. Your own info stays in. All info on a juvenile is fully redacted. Each request must list a report number or the date, time, and place of the incident, plus a self-addressed stamped envelope for mail-back.
Nearby Oahu Cities
Kaneohe sits in the heart of the Windward coast. Pick a city below for local booking and records info.
Kaneohe Jail Mugshots Retention
Kaneohe 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 Kaneohe 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.
Kaneohe Search Tips
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.