Schofield Barracks 72 Hour Booking Search
Schofield Barracks 72 Hour Booking records reflect a split setup. The installation is a U.S. Army base in central Oahu. Civilian arrests near or off the base flow through HPD and state courts. On-base military misconduct moves under the Uniform Code of Military Justice through the Army's provost marshal. To find Schofield Barracks 72 Hour Booking data, start with HPD's District 2 station at Wahiawa and the daily HPD arrest log.
Schofield Barracks 72 Hour Booking Overview
Schofield Barracks 72 Hour Booking Basics
Schofield Barracks is a U.S. Army base in central Oahu. It sits just north of Wahiawa and houses thousands of soldiers, staff, and family. The base has its own law enforcement in the form of military police. They work with the provost marshal's office. Most incidents that happen on base and that involve active duty troops stay in the military system. Those cases fall under the Uniform Code of Military Justice, not state law. That means there is no classic 72 Hour Booking log for purely military offenses.
Civilians on base follow a different path. If a civilian is arrested on Schofield land, the case can move to the federal system through the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Hawaii. Off-base arrests in nearby Wahiawa or Mililani go through HPD and state court. Many people who live at Schofield Barracks shop, drive, and live part of the day off base. Those daily moves put some cases squarely in HPD's hands.
When the roles cross, HPD coordinates with the provost marshal. Hawaii state police policy lists one key rule. Military personnel who are suspects in criminal offenses may be interviewed only after plans are cleared with the provost marshal. That rule also covers Coast Guard and U.S. Public Health Service doctors assigned to the Coast Guard. For the state court side, the Hawaii State Judiciary is the main source.
Schofield Barracks 72 Hour Booking Jurisdiction
Jurisdiction on and around Schofield Barracks splits three ways. Federal. State. Military. Each has its own rules. Knowing which one applies is the first step in tracking a Schofield Barracks 72 Hour Booking case. The Army has exclusive federal jurisdiction over much of the base. HPD does not book people on that land. Instead, the military police handle the initial hold, and the provost marshal decides what happens next.
Civilians inside the base fall under federal court. The U.S. Attorney prosecutes in U.S. District Court in Honolulu. Booking steps look different. The HPD arrest report policy explains how state officers coordinate with federal and military staff when the case crosses lines. Cases that move from military to civilian hands often pass through Wahiawa Police Station first.
Off base, normal rules apply. An HPD stop on a road through Wahiawa or Mililani ends up on the same 14-day HPD arrest log as any other Oahu arrest. Soldiers are not shielded from state arrest when they are off duty and off base. If a soldier picks up a DUI in Wahiawa, the booking shows on the HPD log and goes to state court. The military can open its own case later.
Note: Purely military misconduct that happens on base goes through the UCMJ and does not appear on HPD arrest logs or state court dockets.
HPD Role in Schofield Barracks 72 Hour Booking
The Wahiawa Police Station is the closest HPD office to Schofield Barracks. HPD District 2 has its base there. When a case involves a soldier off base, HPD handles the first steps. The station takes the report, logs the arrest, and starts the 72 Hour Booking file. Officers then coordinate with the base's provost marshal if needed. The Honolulu Police Department site covers district contact info and the full set of record request paths.
For police-side report copies, the HPD reports page lists the request forms. Traffic reports, incident reports, and crash reports each have their own form and fee. The Records Division at Alapai HQ handles mail-in work and walk-in work during weekday hours. Most Schofield area civilian records stop here first.
HPD and Army police sometimes run joint operations near the base. Drunk driving checkpoints on base gates and large event security are two common examples. In those cases, the booking site depends on who made the arrest. Military police book the case on base. HPD books the case off base. The line is set by where the stop happened, not by who the person is.
Civilian Schofield Barracks 72 Hour Booking Cases
Civilian arrests in Schofield are not common but they happen. Contractors, family members, and visitors can be arrested on base. Those cases often go to federal court in Honolulu. Federal booking steps differ from state ones. Fingerprints, mugshots, and intake forms still happen, but the records live in federal systems, not state ones. The eCourt Kokua portal does not cover federal cases.
For civilian cases that start on base and move off, the state court link is still eCourt Kokua. That portal covers District, Circuit, and Family Court. Search by name or case number. If a case got kicked back to HPD for local charges, it shows up on this portal.
Victim alerts for long-term custody flow through the Hawaii SAVIN system. The tool runs 24 hours a day. Alerts cover transfers, parole, and release. It does not cover federal or military custody. For that side, check the Army's or the U.S. Marshals' own tools.
Long-term state holds past the 72-hour window route through Oahu Community Correctional Center at 2199 Kamehameha Highway, Honolulu, HI 96819. The main line is (808) 832-1623. Custody checks can be made by phone or by using the SAVIN search.
Schofield Barracks 72 Hour Booking Laws
State record law covers Schofield Barracks 72 Hour Booking data that lives in HPD and state court files. HRS § 92F-11 says government records are open by default. HRS § 92F-13 lists the common exceptions. Juvenile records, live investigation files, and certain personal data do not come out. The UIPA guide from the Office of Information Practices walks through the full set of rules. The full statute lives on the Hawaii Revised Statutes site.
Federal records follow a different rule set. Federal criminal records tied to base cases fall under federal Freedom of Information Act rules. That is a separate path from state UIPA. It has its own forms, offices, and fee structure.
The state also runs a criminal history check system through the Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center. That tool covers state-level arrests that led to convictions. Federal and military case history does not roll up into the state report.
Hawaii State Judiciary is the right start for state court-side records.
The state judiciary portal holds court records search tools and guides. It covers every Schofield area state case that moves past the 72-hour window.
Sheriffs and Schofield Barracks 72 Hour Booking
The Hawaii Sheriff Division sits under the state Department of Law Enforcement. Sheriffs are not the main law for Schofield. They handle court security, transport, and some state building work. But they tie in when a state case moves from HPD booking to court. Sheriffs may transport a soldier from a state jail to a court date or from the state courthouse back to OCCC.
The Sheriff Division handles transport duties that tie into Schofield Barracks 72 Hour Booking cases that move from state custody to court.
State court search still runs through eCrim. The eCrim portal is $5 per search. Use name, date of birth, or sex to narrow. The result shows state-level convictions only. Military and federal cases do not show up.
Note: Schofield residents who want to confirm a state case history should use the HCJDC name or fingerprint check. That is the most reliable state-side source.
Nearby Cities
Schofield Barracks sits near several central Oahu towns. Each nearby city has its own booking path and HPD coverage.