Kailua 72 Hour Booking Records
Kailua 72 Hour Booking data comes from the Honolulu Police Department, which runs District 4 for the windward side of Oahu. Use the HPD daily arrest log, the Kailua District Court portal, and state tools like eCourt Kokua to pull the name, charge, booking time, and custody location for anyone held in the first 48 to 72 hours after arrest in Kailua. Search starts with the HPD site, then rolls into court filings once a case is open. Most Kailua arrestees move to the Oahu Community Correctional Center after booking.
Kailua 72 Hour Booking Overview
Kailua 72 Hour Booking Through HPD District 4
The Honolulu Police Department splits Oahu into patrol districts. Kailua sits in District 4, which covers both Kailua and nearby Kaneohe. The Kailua Police Station takes the first intake when someone gets arrested in town. Officers log the name, date of birth, charge, time of arrest, and booking number at the station. From there, the person moves to a main HPD cellblock for the 72 Hour Booking window.
The Kailua Substation phone line is (808) 723-8838. Call the desk for arrest confirm, report pickup, or to reach District 4 patrol staff. The station sits on Kailua Road and stays open to walk-ins for routine work. Staff can tell you if a person came in but will not share full booking data by phone. For the full 72 Hour Booking record, you need to go to the HPD arrest log or stop by Alapai HQ.
After the short intake, most Kailua arrestees get moved to HPD Central Receiving in Honolulu. That cellblock sits at 801 South Beretania Street. Custody calls for any person booked in Kailua go to 808-723-3000. The full arrest log for all of Oahu, including Kailua, posts to the HPD site each day. The log holds 14 days of data.
Hawaii State Judiciary covers the court side of every Kailua 72 Hour Booking that turns into a case.
The judiciary page links to all court records tools, rules, and forms. Kailua cases get filed through this system.
Kailua 72 Hour Booking Daily Log
The HPD arrest logs page is the main open source for Kailua 72 Hour Booking data. The daily PDF shows name, age, sex, race, the arresting officer, charge code, and report number for every person brought in islandwide. Kailua entries are tagged by the arresting district. Scan for District 4 rows to spot Kailua cases.
The log rotates. Posts stay up for 14 days, then drop off. Save what you need fast. HPD does not hold an archive on the public site. Older data has to come through a formal request to the HPD Records Division. Fees and wait times apply for archive pulls.
Note: Kailua arrest entries sit within the islandwide HPD log, so you must filter by district or arresting officer to pull local bookings.
Kailua District Court and 72 Hour Booking Cases
Kailua District Court sits at 600 Kailua Road, Kailua, HI 96734. The court handles misdemeanors, traffic cases, and the first felony steps for arrests made on the windward side. After a Kailua 72 Hour Booking, the first court review often lands on this court's docket. The main phone line is 808-534-6300. In-person hours run 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Public access terminals sit inside the Kailua courthouse. Staff can help you pull a case file during business hours. Paper file review is free. Copies cost per page. Case data is also open on eCourt Kokua, the state's online court search. Most Kailua misdemeanor files show up on Kokua within a day of filing.
For felony charges that started with a Kailua arrest, the case moves up to the First Circuit Court at 777 Punchbowl Street in Honolulu. The District Court still keeps the first intake file. Search by party name or case number on Kokua to track the full path from 72 Hour Booking to final outcome.
Transfer to Oahu Community Correctional Center
Once the 72 Hour Booking window runs out, most Kailua arrestees move to the Oahu Community Correctional Center. OCCC sits at 2199 Kamehameha Highway, Honolulu, HI 96819. The main line is (808) 832-1623. The facility is a mixed-use state jail. It holds people waiting for trial and short-term sentenced inmates.
To confirm a person moved to OCCC, use the Hawaii SAVIN portal. Search by name or Offender ID. SAVIN also sends alerts when custody status changes. That helps if you need to know the moment a Kailua detainee gets released or moved again.
SAVIN data does not pull live from the HPD cellblock. It picks up after the person moves into the state jail system. For the short 72 Hour Booking window, HPD's daily arrest log and the Kailua Substation are your best tools.
The state's arrest history tool covers convictions tied to Kailua cases.
Kokua search lets you pull filings from Kailua District Court and the First Circuit Court tied to any Kailua 72 Hour Booking.
eCrim and HCJDC Access for Kailua Records
eCrim is the Adult Criminal Information site run by the state. You can search by name, date of birth, or gender. Each search costs $5. A full certified record costs $12. eCrim covers only convictions and pending cases. It does not show a fresh Kailua 72 Hour Booking that has not hit the court yet.
For a formal arrest history report, go through the Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center. HCJDC offers both name-based and fingerprint checks. A name check is $30 in-office or by mail. A print check is $55 in-office. Non-conviction arrests do not show on either report. That is set by HRS § 846-9.
HCJDC sits on Punchbowl Street in Honolulu. Hours run Monday to Friday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. The office closes at noon for one hour. Parking is metered. HCJDC takes cards, Apple Pay, money orders, or cashier's checks. Cash is not accepted.
HPD Police Reports for Kailua Incidents
To pull the full police report tied to a Kailua 72 Hour Booking, use the HPD police reports page. The online system takes the report number, date, and party info. Reports cost $3 per copy. Some redactions may apply under HRS § 92F-13. You can pick up in person at Alapai HQ or get the report by mail.
The full request can also go through the HPD Records Division. Records staff handle older files, mugshot requests, and incident reports. Wait times run 10 to 30 days for non-routine requests.
Note: HPD redacts juvenile info, victim data, and open case details from any report tied to a Kailua 72 Hour Booking, under state law.
Hawaii Laws Behind Kailua 72 Hour Booking
Public access to booking records comes from HRS § 92F-11, part of the Uniform Information Practices Act. The full text sits on the Hawaii Revised Statutes site. Under this law, records stay open unless a listed exception applies. HPD posts daily arrest logs under that rule.
The split between public and private arrest data comes from HRS § 846-9. Arrests that end in a conviction stay public. Arrests that did not end in a conviction are private unless the person asks for their own copy. The Office of Information Practices writes and updates the rules for how agencies apply these statutes to daily 72 Hour Booking data.
Police can hold a person for up to 48 hours before filing charges under standard Hawaii practice. A judge can extend the hold to 72 hours in some cases. After the window ends, the person has to be charged, moved to a jail, or let go. That is why the 72 Hour Booking term stays so tight to the first post-arrest step.
Nearby Oahu Cities
Other Oahu cities close to Kailua have their own 72 Hour Booking pages. Each links to the right HPD district and courthouse.