Search Kihei 72 Hour Booking Records

Kihei 72 Hour Booking data comes from the Maui Police substation in town and the main records desk at Wailuku HQ. Arrests made on the south shore run through the Kihei substation first, then move to the Wailuku cellblock and MCCC for longer holds. This page shows where to look for booking logs, court case files, and inmate rosters tied to Kihei. Most data posts within hours. Some reports take a short written request and a few business days.

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Kihei 72 Hour Booking Overview

~22,000 Population
Maui PD Police Agency
MCCC Booking Jail
2nd Circuit Court

Kihei Police and 72 Hour Booking Flow

Kihei sits on the south shore of Maui and serves as a major home base for beachgoers, locals, and a growing year-round crowd. Police work in Kihei runs out of the Maui PD substation. The substation covers patrol, traffic stops, and first response. Officers use it as a quick hold point for minor arrests. Longer bookings and all serious charges get moved to the main Wailuku HQ.

The Maui PD records desk sits at 55 Mahalani Street in Wailuku. That is where Kihei booking files live. Once the arrest report and booking sheet post, the data goes into the county records system. An Offender Tracking Number ties to each file for later use in jail and court records. The record desk takes in-person and written requests for copies.

For full request steps, see the Maui County public records request page. It lists the form, fees, and turnaround time for Kihei booking records. Most reports cost a few dollars per page. Certified copies cost more. Response time runs a few business days for routine files.

Kihei 72 Hour Booking Holds

After booking, Kihei arrestees move to the Maui Community Correctional Center in Wailuku. MCCC sits at 600 Waiale Drive. The jail holds people from all of Maui, plus a few from Lanai and Molokai. Capacity runs near 301. Bed space gets tight at times, so some arrestees move to the Oahu Community Correctional Center on short notice. Call first to confirm where the person sits.

MCCC takes custody calls at (808) 243-5861. Staff can confirm a booking and list the date of intake. They do not share full charge info over the phone in most cases. Visit hours, mail rules, and deposit steps live on the state Department of Corrections site. Check those before you drive out.

HCJDC criminal history records for Kihei 72 Hour Booking searches

The Maui court records guide walks you through ways to check on a Kihei arrestee after the 72 Hour Booking window closes. It covers eCourt Kokua, the in-person terminals, and the clerk's office.

To see if the person is still at MCCC, check the Hawaii Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation roster. The system pulls from the state jail data. Names post within a day of transfer from the cellblock.

Note: MCCC does not post charge data online, so pair the jail roster check with an eCourt Kokua lookup by party name to get the full picture.

Kihei 72 Hour Booking Court Records

Kihei cases go through the Second Circuit Court in Wailuku. The main site is Hoapili Hale at 2145 Main Street. The Circuit Court hears felonies, big civil suits, and family court. The District Court branch on the same site takes traffic and misdemeanor cases. Both branches share records staff and the same public terminals.

To search court files tied to a Kihei arrest, use eCourt Kokua. The free tool covers all four trial court types. Search by name or case number. Case numbers use a 12-digit format. Maui cases start with the 2 prefix for the Second Circuit. Results show hearing dates, charges, and docket events.

Walk-in lookups work too. Go to Hoapili Hale Room 106 during the 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. window on weekdays. Staff can pull case files and print copies for a small per-page fee. Call ahead if you need a sealed file or a record from a closed case. See the main Hawaii Judiciary site for forms, fees, and court rules.

For past criminal history on a Kihei resident, the statewide tool is eCrim. It costs $5 per search. A full record runs $12. The file pulls convictions and pending cases from all four main counties. Non-conviction arrests never appear in eCrim output.

Request Police Records for Kihei

The county runs a formal records request system. Use the Maui County records request page to file a UIPA request. The form asks for the record type, date range, and the names or case numbers you have. Response time runs ten working days for most files. Complex requests take longer.

Maui County public records request for Kihei 72 Hour Booking files

The county records page lists all the request types, fees, and steps. Use it for Kihei police reports, 911 call logs, and other files tied to a booking. Some reports have redactions for privacy.

For criminal history checks, the Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center runs the statewide file. See the HCJDC records page for both name-based and fingerprint checks. A name check costs $30 in-office. A print check costs $55. Both pull only convictions and pending cases.

Kihei Victim Alerts and Statewide Tools

Victims and other interested people can sign up for free custody alerts. The Hawaii SAVIN portal sends text, email, or phone updates when a Kihei arrestee moves, bails, or leaves jail. Signup is private. The tool runs every day of the year. Search by Offender ID or name.

SAVIN starts when the person moves into the state corrections system. It does not pull the first 72 hours of cellblock data. For that short window, call the Maui PD records line or check the county arrest log.

The Office of Information Practices handles disputes over record access. If the Maui records desk closes a file you think should be open, OIP can step in. File an appeal on the OIP site. The group runs under HRS § 92F and handles both state and county records.

Kihei 72 Hour Booking Record Laws

The core law for Kihei 72 Hour Booking access is HRS § 92F-11. It says all government records are open unless another rule closes them. The full text sits on the Hawaii Revised Statutes site. Daily arrest logs count as open records. So do most court filings after the 72 Hour Booking window closes.

HRS § 92F-13 lists the exceptions. It names records that hurt personal privacy, active investigations, or trade secrets. A Kihei arrest file can be closed in part if release would harm a live case. Redactions get done page by page. Juvenile arrests never go public, no matter the charge.

Non-conviction arrest files get special rules. The person named can ask for their own copy. A third party cannot pull the same file unless a court order allows it. That split keeps private data out of public view while still letting each person see their own record. The rule comes from the same UIPA laws that cover 72 Hour Booking data statewide.

Kihei Contact Info

The Maui Police HQ line is (808) 244-6400. The Kihei substation has its own phone but most records work funnels to the Wailuku HQ. Records Section hours run 7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. weekdays. MCCC custody calls go to (808) 243-5861. Hoapili Hale Legal Documents Branch takes court queries at (808) 244-2752.

For island-wide tools, see the Hawaii SAVIN alerts, the eCourt Kokua portal, and the Maui public records page. The three together cover most of what you need to trace a Kihei booking from start to finish.

Note: Kihei substation hours vary by day, so for reliable records help plan your visit at the Wailuku HQ records desk instead.

Nearby Cities on Maui

Other Maui towns share the same police and court system. Each has its own page with local contacts and links.

Kihei, Kahului, and Wailuku sit a short drive apart on central and south Maui. All three feed into the same Maui PD records desk, MCCC cellblock, and Hoapili Hale court.

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