Search Wailuku Jail Mugshots
Wailuku Jail Mugshots come from the Maui Police Department and the Maui Community Correctional Center. As the county seat of Maui County, Wailuku holds the main police headquarters, the largest jail on the island, and the Second Circuit courthouse. Most Maui bookings pass through this town. This page shows how to pull booking photos, arrest logs, and inmate info through the right Wailuku offices. You will also see the hours and the walk-in address for each agency.
Wailuku Records Overview
Wailuku Police Records
The Maui Police Department runs out of Wailuku. The main office sits at 55 Mahalani Street, Wailuku, HI 96793. The phone is (808) 244-6400. The department covers all of Maui County, which means Maui, Molokai, and Lanai. Most walk-in record requests for arrests in Wailuku go through this office. The Records Section is in the same building. Hours run Monday through Friday from 7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Find staff contacts and district info on the Maui Police Department page.
Records staff handle arrest logs, incident reports, and traffic crash reports for the full county.
Police reports are open after a case is closed. Staff redact personal info before release. You will need to give the report number or the date, time, and place of the incident. Bring a photo ID. Payment is cash or check, made out to the County of Maui. The office does not take card. Ask for a receipt.
Under the Hawaii Uniform Information Practices Act, arrest info is public record. See HRS Chapter 92F and the Office of Information Practices for the full rule. Juvenile records stay sealed. The department has 10 working days to respond under the law.
Maui Community Correctional Center
The Maui Community Correctional Center (MCCC) is the main jail for Maui County. The site sits at 600 Waiale Road, Wailuku, HI 96793. The phone is (808) 243-5858. MCCC has about 301 beds. Daily population often runs around 363, so the jail stays over its rated capacity most of the year. The facility holds pre-trial detainees, short-term sentenced inmates, and some parole violators. Both male and female inmates are housed on site.
Get facility updates on the state MCCC page.
Booking photos taken at MCCC go into the state OffenderTrak file and show up in the DPS inmate search.
Visiting hours run Monday through Friday from 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., with weekend hours from 7:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Call ahead to confirm slots. Visitors must bring a valid photo ID. Minors need a parent or legal guardian on site. The jail limits the number of visitors per inmate per day.
Note: The Maui Intake Service Center at 1797-#1 Wili Pa Loop, Wailuku, handles pre-trial screening and bail reports. Call (808) 243-5008 with questions.
Wailuku Inmate Search
Use the Hawaii DPS Inmate Search to find a person held at MCCC or any other state jail. Enter a full or partial name, a date of birth, or an offender ID. Results show facility, status, and offender number. The tool pulls from the same OffenderTrak system used at the front desk of the jail.
For release alerts, sign up for Hawaii SAVIN VINE. Pick Hawaii. Search by name or ID. Add a phone or email. You will get a call or message when the person is moved, released, or set for a hearing. VINE is free.
Second Circuit Court in Wailuku
The Second Circuit Court sits at Hoapili Hale, 2145 Main Street, Wailuku, HI 96793. The phone is (808) 244-2800. The circuit serves all of Maui County, including Molokai and Lanai. Felony criminal cases, civil cases over $40,000, and family court matters run through this court. The Wailuku District Court handles misdemeanor cases, traffic, and small claims in the same building complex.
For online case lookup, use eCourt Kokua. The tool is free. You can search by name, case number, or citation. Results show charges, hearing dates, and case status. Criminal and traffic files are open to the public under the UIPA, with some exceptions for sealed cases and juvenile matters.
Walk-in access to the clerk's office runs weekdays from 7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Staff can pull a paper file and let you view it on site. Copies cost $0.25 per page. Certified copies cost more. Ask the clerk for the current fee chart.
Maui County Records Portal
The county runs a formal public records portal for Wailuku and the rest of Maui County. Submit requests online through the Maui County Public Records Portal. The system tracks your request, sends status updates, and delivers files once ready. You can ask for arrest info, police reports, jail records, and a mix of other county files.
Fees are set by county rule. Search time costs $2.50 for each 15-minute block. Copy fees run $0.25 per page. The first $30 in fees is waived per request. After that, the clerk will bill you before release. Payment is by check or card through the portal.
- Search fee: $2.50 per 15 minutes
- Copy fee: $0.25 per page
- First $30 waived per request
- Response time: 10 working days
If the office needs more time, it must send a written notice. The notice names a new due date. State law caps the wait at an added 20 working days for most files.
Wailuku Criminal History Records
For a full conviction record, go through the Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center. HCJDC runs out of 465 S. King Street, Room 102, Honolulu, HI 96813. The phone is (808) 587-3279. The office does name-based and fingerprint-based checks for the whole state, including Wailuku arrests. Section 846-9 of the Hawaii Revised Statutes makes conviction info public while non-conviction info stays closed.
The eCrim portal is the online option. A search costs $5. An official record costs $12. You can pay by card. The portal covers the whole state, so a Wailuku record shows up the same way as a Honolulu or Hilo record. For a fingerprint-based check, you must visit the HCJDC office in person.
Note: HCJDC handles convictions only. For a booking photo tied to a pending case, go direct to MCCC or the Maui Police Records Section in Wailuku.
Other Maui County Resources
Wailuku is the central hub for records on Maui. Most booking photos, arrest logs, and court files across the island tie back to offices in this town. The Maui County records page covers the full range of local and state resources that serve the island.
For records in the rest of the state, see the Honolulu County records page and the Hawaii County records page. Both islands have their own jail and police records office. Statewide tools like the DPS inmate search and eCourt Kokua will cover all three counties at once.