Search Maui County Jail Mugshots
Maui County Jail Mugshots come from the Maui Police Department and the Maui Community Correctional Center in Wailuku. You can look up current inmates through the state DPS tool, pull arrest info from MPD Records, or file a public records request with the county. The county covers Maui, Molokai, and Lanai. This page lays out where to find booking photos, which office to call, and how to track a case from arrest to court. Each source below ties back to an official state or county site.
Maui County Overview
MCCC and Maui County Jail Mugshots
The Maui Community Correctional Center is the main jail for the whole county. The site sits at 600 Waiale Road, Wailuku, HI 96793. Phone: (808) 243-5858. MCCC holds both male and female inmates. It takes in pre-trial detainees and people with sentences up to one year. The rated capacity is 301 beds. The daily count often runs near 363, which puts the site at about 120.6% of capacity. That makes MCCC one of the most crowded jails in the state.
The staff books roughly 2,200 to 2,400 people each year. About 58% are pre-trial. The rest are sentenced. Felonies make up 53% of the load. Misdemeanors run about 37%. The last 10% cover other holds like civil or federal transfers.
The facility keeps a booking photo on file for each inmate from intake.
MCCC runs a long list of programs. There are educational classes, substance abuse groups, vocational training, religious services, and mental health care. These help cut the odds of a return trip. The site also works with Maui community groups on reentry plans. Staff call these programs a key part of daily life inside the fence. Most inmates take part in at least one program track while they wait for court or serve time.
Visiting runs Monday through Friday from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. On weekends and state holidays, visits are 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. Visitors must be on the inmate's approved list. Photo ID is required at the gate. The site does a basic search at entry. No cell phones, bags, or outside food are allowed inside the visit room.
Note: Female inmates from Maui who serve more than a year are moved to the Women's Community Correctional Center at 42-477 Kalanianaole Highway, Kailua, on Oahu.
Maui County Inmate Search
Use the Hawaii DPS Inmate Search to find a person held at MCCC or any other state site. The tool takes a full or partial name, date of birth, or offender ID. Results show the facility, custody status, offender number, and intake date. It pulls from the same OffenderTrak file the jail uses for daily counts. Federal inmates and people in out-of-state holds do not show up in this tool.
The site is free. You do not have to sign in. Most family members use it as the first stop after an arrest.
The same search page covers all four county jails across Hawaii.
For alerts on movement or release, use the Hawaii SAVIN VINE system. Pick Hawaii. Search by name or ID. Add your phone or email. VINE will push a note when the person moves, gets out, or has a court date. The service is free. It runs 24 hours a day. VINE pulls from the same core data as DPS, so the match lines up with the jail's own record.
Case info past the jail goes through the state court site. Use eCourt Kokua to look up hearing dates, bail status, and case number. Cross-check the case number from VINE against the court site to find the full filing chain.
Maui Intake Service Center
New arrestees pass through the Maui Intake Service Center before they go to MCCC. The center is at 1797-#1 Wili Pa Loop, Wailuku, HI 96793. Phone: (808) 243-5008. Fax: (808) 243-5108. Staff at intake run medical screening, mental health checks, and risk scoring. The score helps the judge set bail and pick the right housing unit inside the jail.
Intake also handles the first booking photo, fingerprints, and property log. Once a person clears intake, the file moves with them to MCCC. The booking photo stays on the state record and shows up in the DPS search tool. The intake file is not open to the public on its own. You have to ask MPD Records or file a county records request to get a copy of the arrest paperwork.
Maui County Police Department Records
The Maui Police Department covers Maui, Molokai, and Lanai. The main office is at 55 Mahalani Street, Wailuku, HI 96793. The Records Section number is (808) 244-6400. Records is open Monday through Friday from 7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. It is closed on state and federal holidays. MPD handles arrest reports, incident reports, traffic reports, and name-based criminal history checks for county residents.
The same office also serves as a Public Access Site for state criminal history checks.
MPD runs patrol offices across the county. The Wailuku headquarters holds the main booking desk. The Kihei South Maui Patrol Office sits at 155 Kio Loop, Kihei. Lahaina and West Maui calls route out of Wailuku. Hana District, Molokai, and Lanai all fall under the same main office. Each patrol office can answer basic questions, but only the main Records Section can print a report or a criminal history.
For a criminal history check, the Public Access Site at MPD prints a name-based record for $25 per print. That pulls the same file as the state center in Honolulu. If you want the print, bring a photo ID and cash or a check made out to the county.
- Records Section: (808) 244-6400
- Hours: Mon-Fri, 7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
- Public Access Site print: $25
- Main office: 55 Mahalani Street, Wailuku
Note: MPD Records does not keep the full arrest log online, so most recent booking info must be pulled by a walk-in, phone call, or county records request.
Maui County Public Records Request
The county runs a single portal for all public records. The Maui County Public Records Request Portal went live on January 24, 2024. It covers nine county agencies, including the Maui Police Department. You can file, track, and pay for a request through one login. The portal ties into the state Uniform Information Practices Act, or UIPA, which sets the rules for public records in Hawaii. Chapter 92F of the Hawaii Revised Statutes is the main law. It says the county must respond in 10 business days, or 20 with a delay notice.
The county also keeps a back-up page at mauicounty.us/public-record-requests. Contact: (808) 270-7838 or ocs.request@mauicounty.us. The Office of Council Services is at 200 S. High Street, Wailuku, HI 96793.
Fees run on a set chart. A search costs $2.50 per 15 minutes. Review or segregation of records runs $5.00 per 15 minutes. Copies cost $0.25 per page. The first $30 of fees is waived. The first $60 may be waived on a public interest basis. Staff send a fee estimate before work starts. You must approve the estimate before the clock runs.
Under HRS Chapter 846, conviction info is open to the public. Non-conviction info stays sealed. Section 92F-12(a)(13) makes basic inmate data public as well. That includes name, intake date, offense, and custody status. The mugshot itself is not called out in the statute, but Hawaii treats it as part of the public arrest file in most cases. If the file is sealed or expunged, the photo is pulled with it.
Maui County Jail Mugshots Access
For a quick view of the jail and its main contact info, the state DPS page for MCCC has the best rundown. It shows the facility photo, key phone numbers, and the rated beds. Use it before you call ahead, so you know which window to ask for at the gate.
The same page links out to the DPS director's office in Honolulu for statewide questions.
Maui County Courts and Bookings
Felony cases in the county go to the Second Circuit Court at Hoapili Hale, 2145 Main Street, Wailuku, HI 96793. Phone: (808) 244-2800. The court runs Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Misdemeanor and traffic cases go to the Wailuku District Court in the same building. The first court date after a booking is almost always set within 48 hours.
Use eCourt Kokua to pull the case number, charge list, and hearing dates. The site is free. It covers all state courts. The booking file from MCCC or MPD lines up with the court file through the case number. That means you can start at the jail record, find the case, and track the case through to the verdict.
Criminal History for Maui County
For an official conviction history, go to the Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center. HCJDC sits at 465 S. King Street, Room 102, Honolulu, HI 96813. Phone: (808) 587-3279. The office runs name checks and fingerprint checks for the whole state, Maui County included. It works under the Department of the Attorney General. Section 846-9 of the Hawaii Revised Statutes sets the rule that conviction info is public while non-conviction info stays closed.
You can also use the online eCrim portal. A search costs $5. An official record costs $12. The full list of HCJDC Public Access Sites shows where to get a $25 name-based print. The Maui Police Department is the main Public Access Site for county residents.
Arrest records often list full legal name, date of birth, gender, race, physical traits, mugshot, fingerprints, arrest date, time, location, arresting agency, arresting officer, charges, statute cites, charge class, open warrants, booking info, bail amount, court info, and custody status. State rules say felony conviction records are kept on file for life. Misdemeanors stay for at least 10 years. Traffic files run 5 to 10 years. Arrests with no conviction stay at least 5 years. Juvenile files may be sealed once the person turns 18.
Note: The eCrim portal shows convictions only. For a jail mugshot tied to an open case, call MCCC or the MPD Records Section.
Cities in Maui County
Maui County covers Maui, Molokai, and Lanai. Pick a city below for local police info and booking details.