Makakilo Jail Mugshots Search

Makakilo Jail Mugshots link to the Honolulu Police Department District 8 at the Kapolei Police Station. Makakilo is a hillside community overlooking the Ewa plain. Inmates arrested in the area get booked at the Oahu Community Correctional Center. This page walks through the local patrol station, the booking jail, the court that hears Makakilo cases, and how to search for a booking photo. You will find a link to each state tool along the way.

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Makakilo Overview

8 HPD District
Kapolei Police Station
OCCC Booking Jail
Kapolei District Court

HPD District 8 covers Makakilo. The Kapolei Police Station is the main hub. The station is at 1100 Kamokila Boulevard, Kapolei, HI 96707. The phone is (808) 723-8400. The fax is (808) 723-8416. District 8 also covers Kapolei, Ewa Beach, Ocean Pointe, Ewa Gentry, Waianae, and Nanakuli. The Waianae Substation at 85-939 Farrington Highway backs up patrol work for the far west end of the district.

Makakilo Jail Mugshots Kapolei Police Station

Kapolei is the Second City of Oahu. Makakilo sits just up the slope. Patrol officers move between both areas throughout the day.

The Makakilo area climbs the ridgeline above the Ewa plain. Older parts of town date from the 1970s. Newer subdivisions have filled in the hillside over the past 20 years. Steep streets and winding roads make patrol work a challenge. Most local arrests tie to property crime, traffic cases, and low-level drug matters.

Makakilo Jail Mugshots Log Access

HPD posts a daily arrest log. Makakilo arrests show under District 8. The HPD arrest logs page holds 14 days of entries online. Each line lists date and time of arrest, name, age, sex, race, the arresting officer, the charge, and the report number. The log is a PDF.

For a log older than 14 days, write to HPD Records at 801 South Beretania Street, Honolulu, HI 96813. Staff will pull the dates you name and bill for copy fees. The Records Division is the only unit that can copy an arrest log for the public. Walk-in and phone requests do not work for old logs.

Where Makakilo Inmates Go

Makakilo inmates get booked at the Oahu Community Correctional Center at 2199 Kamehameha Highway, Honolulu, HI 96819. The phone is (808) 832-1777. OCCC has about 950 beds. The site holds pre-trial inmates from across Oahu. Sentenced men with terms over one year move to Halawa Correctional Facility. Women move to the Women's Community Correctional Center in Kailua.

The booking photo taken at OCCC stays in the state's OffenderTrak file for the life of the case. The same image shows up in the DPS inmate search tool if the inmate moves to another state site. Visits at OCCC run daily from 7:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. except state holidays. Call (808) 832-1633 to book a slot.

Note: Juvenile arrests are not in the public log or inmate search. Juvenile booking data is sealed under Hawaii law.

Use the HCJDC site for long-term criminal history. For live custody data, the state runs two tools. The Hawaii DPS Inmate Search returns facility, status, and offender number for a name. The Hawaii SAVIN VINE system pushes alerts for moves, releases, and court dates.

Makakilo Jail Mugshots Criminal Justice Data Center

HCJDC holds the state's central criminal history file and runs the eCrim portal at the state office in Honolulu.

Both tools use the same OffenderTrak data. That keeps the search result in sync with the actual jail file. A booking photo taken in Makakilo tracks through every move on the same record.

Makakilo Court Path

Misdemeanor and traffic cases from Makakilo go to the Kapolei District Court. That court sits in the Ronald T.Y. Moon Judiciary Complex in Kapolei. Felony cases go to the Honolulu Circuit Court at Ka'ahumanu Hale, 777 Punchbowl Street. The Circuit Court Legal Documents Branch is at (808) 539-4300.

You can pull court info through eCourt Kokua. The portal shows charges, hearing dates, and case status for Kapolei or Honolulu cases.

Makakilo Jail Mugshots and State Law

Hawaii's public records law is the UIPA 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. OIP is at (808) 586-1400.

HRS Chapter 846 is the companion law. Section 846-9 keeps conviction info public and non-conviction info closed. Juvenile data is sealed under 846 as well.

The agency has 10 business days to answer a UIPA request. A hard case can run up to 20 business days with a delay notice.

Makakilo Conviction Records

For a conviction record tied to a Makakilo case, the eCrim portal is the fastest path. Each search costs $5. An official record costs $12. HCJDC is at 465 S. King Street, Room 102, Honolulu, HI 96813, (808) 587-3279.

  • eCrim search: $5
  • Official eCrim report: $12
  • Paper name check: $30
  • Fingerprint check: $55
  • Public Access Site print: $25

The closest Public Access Site for a Makakilo resident is the HPD main office at 801 South Beretania Street, Honolulu.

Makakilo Jail Mugshots Retention

Makakilo 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 Makakilo 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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