Kihei Jail Mugshots in Maui County

Kihei Jail Mugshots run through the Maui Police Department records system. Kihei sits in South Maui, and the South Maui Patrol Office covers the beat. Inmates arrested in Kihei go to the Maui Community Correctional Center in Wailuku. To find a booking photo or current custody status, you start with the Maui PD records section or the state DPS inmate search. This page lays out each step and links to every official tool.

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Kihei Overview

Maui County
South Maui Patrol Area
MCCC Local Jail
Wailuku Courthouse

Kihei is a major resort and residential area on the southwest coast of Maui. The Maui County Police Department runs patrol and arrest work from its Wailuku HQ at 55 Mahalani Street, Wailuku, HI 96793. The Records Section phone is (808) 244-6400. The South Maui Patrol Office at 155 Kio Loop, Kihei, HI 96753 handles day-to-day work for Kihei, Wailea, Makena, and Maalaea.

Kihei Jail Mugshots Maui County arrest records

The patrol staff manages beach calls, traffic cases on South Kihei Road, and resort-area reports.

Kihei gets heavy tourist traffic. That drives arrests for theft, DUI, and public order cases. The beat officers book through Maui PD, and every arrest flows through the county records unit in Wailuku.

Kihei Jail Mugshots at MCCC

Arrests made in Kihei 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 pre-trial and sentenced inmates with terms of up to one year. Both male and female inmates are kept on site.

Kihei Jail Mugshots Maui Community Correctional Center

MCCC books all new arrivals from across Maui County, including Kihei.

MCCC runs above its rated cap of 301. The daily count runs about 363 people. Annual bookings hit 2,200 to 2,400 each year. Pre-trial inmates make up 58 percent of the daily count. Felony charges drive 53 percent of the work. The Maui Intake Service Center at 1797 Wili Pa Loop, Wailuku, (808) 243-5008, handles the first screen for each new arrival.

Note: Sentences longer than a year trigger a move to a state prison on Oahu. Most Kihei inmates stay on Maui for the length of the case.

Records Requests for Kihei Arrests

To get a booking photo or full arrest record from a Kihei case, file a UIPA request with Maui County. Use the new online portal at https://mauicountyhi.govqa.us/WEBAPP/_rs/ or mail a written request to the Maui Police Department records section at 55 Mahalani Street, Wailuku, HI 96793. Call (808) 270-7838 for help with the form. The email is ocs.request@mauicounty.us.

Fees follow the county schedule. Search time runs $2.50 per 15 minutes. Review runs $5 per 15 minutes. Duplication is $0.25 per page. The first $30 of fees is waived. The first $60 can be waived for requests that serve the public interest.

Under HRS Chapter 92F, Maui County has 10 business days to respond. A hard case can run up to 20 business days with a delay notice.

The fastest way to find a Kihei inmate is the Hawaii DPS Inmate Search. Search by name, date of birth, or offender ID. Partial names work. The result shows the facility and custody status. Each match ties to the booking photo on file.

The Hawaii SAVIN VINE system sends alerts. Pick Hawaii from the state dropdown. Enter a name or offender ID. Add a phone or email. VINE posts push alerts on moves, releases, and court dates. The tool is free.

Kihei Court Matters

Felony cases out of Kihei go to the Second Circuit Court at Hoapili Hale in Wailuku. That court is at 2145 Main Street, Wailuku, HI 96793, phone (808) 244-2800. The Wailuku District Court handles misdemeanor and traffic cases. You can run a case lookup through eCourt Kokua. The system shows charges, hearing dates, and case status.

The public access terminal at the courthouse is open Monday through Friday. That is a free way to review the case file on site without a fee.

Kihei and the UIPA

Hawaii's public records law is the Uniform Information Practices Act. It lives at HRS Chapter 92F. Under 92F-12(a)(13), inmate info is public. Under 92F-12(a)(5), arrest info is public. The Office of Information Practices handles appeals at (808) 586-1400.

HRS Chapter 846 governs the state's criminal history records. Section 846-9 keeps conviction info open and non-conviction info closed. Juvenile records are sealed.

Kihei Conviction Records

For a conviction check tied to a Kihei arrest, go to the Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center. HCJDC is in Honolulu at 465 S. King Street, Room 102. Phone: (808) 587-3279. The eCrim portal is the fastest online path. Each search is $5. An official record is $12.

Maui PD is a Public Access Site. A walk-in print at 55 Mahalani Street, Wailuku, costs $25 cash. The HCJDC Criminal History Records Check form covers both name-based and fingerprint-based checks.

Kihei Jail Mugshots Retention

Kihei 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 Kihei 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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