Access Mililani Town Jail Mugshots

Mililani Town Jail Mugshots are held in the Honolulu Police Department records system. The Wahiawa Police Station runs patrol and arrest work for the Mililani area. Pre-trial inmates from Mililani Town go to the Oahu Community Correctional Center in Honolulu. This page walks you through how to search for a booking photo, check current custody status, and reach the right records office. You will find links to each official tool and the main law that controls what gets released.

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Mililani Town Overview

2 HPD District
Wahiawa Patrol Station
OCCC Jail Site
1960s Town Built

The Wahiawa Police Station handles patrol services for Mililani Town. The station is at 330 North Cane Street, Wahiawa, HI 96786. The phone is (808) 723-8700. District 2 covers Mililani Town, Wahiawa, Whitmore Village, and the land near Schofield Barracks. It is the same patrol district that also covers Mililani Mauka and Royal Kunia.

Mililani Town was built in the 1960s as Oahu's first master-planned community. The area stays low on the crime scale, with most local arrests tied to minor property or traffic matters. Even so, those arrests still flow into the state's booking system like any other. The jail mugshot taken on arrival stays in the record for the life of the file.

Mililani Town Jail Mugshots and Inmate Search

Use the Hawaii DPS Inmate Search to look up a Mililani Town inmate. You can search by name, date of birth, or offender ID. The tool takes partial names too. Results show the facility, custody status, and offender number. The system holds data for adult inmates in state custody.

Mililani Town Jail Mugshots inmate search

Check the site each day for status changes. Most moves post within hours of the actual transfer.

The same tool also links to the booking photo on file when one is tied to the record. Federal inmates and people held out of state are not in the tool.

Note: The DPS tool is the best first step. It works for Mililani Town as well as every other city on Oahu.

VINE Alerts for Mililani Town Inmates

For alerts on a Mililani Town inmate, use the Hawaii SAVIN VINE system. Pick Hawaii from the state list. Search by name or offender ID. Add a phone or email to get push alerts. VINE sends notices for moves, releases, and court dates. The tool is free. Victims use it most, but it is open to any member of the public.

Mililani Town Jail Mugshots SAVIN VINE alerts

VINE pulls from the same OffenderTrak data the jails use, so the alert keeps in sync with the live custody file.

Mililani Town Arrest Logs

The HPD daily arrest log holds Mililani Town arrests under District 2. Each entry lists date and time, name, age, sex, race, the arresting officer, the charge, and the report number. HPD rolls the log off the web after 14 days. You can read the current log as a PDF each day.

For a log older than 14 days, write to HPD Records at 801 South Beretania Street, Honolulu, HI 96813. The division does not accept phone or walk-in log requests for older entries. Staff will pull the log copy you name in the request and bill you for copy fees.

HPD follows a clear policy on log access. Only actual logs or photocopies go out. The unit does not run name searches for the public. You read the log yourself to find a Mililani Town entry.

UIPA and Mililani Town Records

Hawaii's public records law is the UIPA, at HRS Chapter 92F. Section 92F-12(a)(13) makes inmate info public. Section 92F-12(a)(5) makes arrest info public. The agency has 10 working days to respond to a request. A hard case can run up to 20 working days.

The Office of Information Practices runs the law. You can appeal a denial through OIP. Call (808) 586-1400 or visit the OIP site for the appeal form.

HRS Chapter 846 sets the rule for what goes in a criminal history file. Section 846-9 makes conviction info public. Non-conviction info stays private.

Mililani Town Court Cases

Misdemeanor cases from Mililani Town go to the Wahiawa District Court. Felony cases move to the Honolulu Circuit Court at 777 Punchbowl Street, Honolulu. The Legal Documents Branch at Circuit Court is at (808) 539-4300. You can look up either court's records through the eCourt Kokua system. That shows charges, hearing dates, and case status.

The Ho'ohiki civil portal sits next to eCourt Kokua. It holds civil filings from Circuit, District, and Family courts across the state.

Criminal History in Mililani Town

The Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center holds the state's criminal history file. HCJDC is at 465 S. King Street, Room 102, Honolulu, HI 96813. Phone: (808) 587-3279. Use the eCrim portal online. Each search is $5. An official record is $12.

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

The closest Public Access Site for a Mililani Town resident is the Honolulu Police Department at 801 South Beretania Street. A print costs $25 cash at the site.

Mililani Town Jail Mugshots Retention

Mililani Town 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 Mililani Town 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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