Find Wailuku 72 Hour Booking Data
Wailuku 72 Hour Booking records sit at the heart of Maui's records system. The town holds the Maui Police HQ, the Maui Community Correctional Center, and the Second Circuit Court. A Wailuku arrest moves through all three sites within the first 72 hours. This page shows how to search booking logs, court case files, and inmate rosters tied to Wailuku. Most data posts fast. Some reports take a short written request and a few days of turnaround time.
Wailuku 72 Hour Booking Overview
Wailuku 72 Hour Booking Records Hub
Wailuku is the county seat of Maui. It holds the main offices for police, jail, and court work on the island. The Maui Police HQ sits at 55 Mahalani Street, a short walk from the county building. The MCCC jail sits a mile away at 600 Waiale Drive. Hoapili Hale, the main court, sits downtown at 2145 Main Street. A Wailuku arrest tends to pass through all three sites in the first 72 hours.
The Maui PD Records Section runs out of the HQ. Staff handle police report copies, arrest logs, and UIPA requests for the full county. Hours run 7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Walk-in requests work for most routine files. Mail and written requests take a bit longer. The desk takes payment by card, check, or money order.
For a full walkthrough of the request steps, see the Maui County public records request page. The page lists the request form, the fee range, and response time. Simple copies cost a few dollars. Certified records cost more.
Wailuku 72 Hour Booking at MCCC
Wailuku arrestees get booked at the Maui Police HQ cellblock first. Staff take a mugshot, prints, and the basic intake data. Then the person moves to MCCC, the main jail for Maui County. MCCC holds people from all over the island, plus a few from Lanai and Molokai. Capacity sits near 301. Bed counts can run tight. When that happens, some people move to Oahu jail on short notice.
Call MCCC at (808) 243-5861 to confirm if a Wailuku arrestee is held there. The front desk can list booking date and housing. They do not read charges over the phone in most cases. For charge details, use eCourt Kokua once the case hits the docket.
The Maui arrest records page walks through the steps to pull a booking report from the HQ records desk. Reports cover name, charge, time of arrest, and arresting officer.
To check if a Wailuku arrestee remains in custody, use the Hawaii Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation roster. It pulls from the state jail system. Names post within a day of transfer from the police cellblock to the jail.
Note: MCCC transfers can move a Wailuku arrestee to Oahu without warning, so call the jail before you plan a visit or deposit money on a commissary account.
Wailuku 72 Hour Booking Court Path
The Second Circuit Court sits in Wailuku at Hoapili Hale, 2145 Main Street. The court covers Maui, Lanai, and Molokai. Wailuku arrestees appear at Hoapili Hale for first review, arraignment, and all later hearings. The site holds the Circuit Court for felonies and big civil suits. It also holds the District Court for traffic and misdemeanor cases. Family Court sits at the same complex.
The Legal Documents Branch at Room 106 takes public record requests. Hours run 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays. The phone line is (808) 244-2752. The fax line is (808) 244-2932. Staff can pull case files, print copies, and help with case number lookups. The per-page fee is small. Certified copies cost more.
To search from home, use eCourt Kokua. The free tool covers all four trial court types across Hawaii. Search by name or case number. Maui cases start with the 2 prefix for the Second Circuit. Results show hearing dates, charges, and docket events.
For past Wailuku conviction data, eCrim pulls from the statewide file. Each search costs $5. A full report costs $12. The file covers all four counties. Only convictions and pending cases appear. Non-conviction arrests do not show up in eCrim at all.
UIPA Requests for Wailuku Records
Maui County runs an online UIPA request tool. The Maui County public records request page takes full requests for police reports, 911 logs, and other files. Fill in the form with the record type, date range, and any case or booking ID you know. Response time runs ten working days for most routine files. Complex requests can take longer.
The records page lists fee rules, redaction policies, and the full UIPA process. Some files come back with parts blacked out for privacy. The law allows that split under HRS § 92F-13.
For criminal history checks, go through HCJDC. The HCJDC records check page lists name-based and fingerprint checks. Name checks cost $30 in-office. Fingerprints cost $55. Mail checks cost a bit less. Only convictions and pending cases appear.
The Office of Information Practices handles record disputes. If the Maui records desk closes a file you think should be open, file an appeal with OIP. The office runs under HRS § 92F and covers both state and county bodies.
Wailuku 72 Hour Booking Access Laws
Hawaii law sets the rules for record access. The main law is HRS § 92F-11, which says all government records are open unless closed by another law. The full text sits on the Hawaii Revised Statutes site. Maui PD, MCCC, and Hoapili Hale all fall under the rule. Daily arrest logs and most court filings count as open records.
HRS § 846-9 splits arrest records two ways. Convictions stay public. Non-conviction arrests stay private unless the person asks for their own file. That means a Wailuku resident arrested but never charged can still get a copy by request. A third party cannot pull the same file without a court order.
Juvenile arrests always stay closed. Sealed files and expunged records also stay out of public view. HRS § 831-3.2 sets the rules for expungement of non-conviction arrests. The Attorney General reviews each request. Once granted, the file is treated as if the arrest never took place.
Wailuku Victim Alerts and State Tools
The Hawaii SAVIN portal sends free alerts when a Wailuku arrestee changes custody status. Signup is private. Alerts come by phone, text, or email. The tool covers transfers, release, and parole. Search by Offender ID or name. The service runs every day of the year.
SAVIN starts after the person enters state corrections. The first 72 Hour Booking window does not feed SAVIN. For that short window, call the Maui PD records line or MCCC front desk. The Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation runs all jails, including MCCC.
For court records across the state, use the main Hawaii Judiciary site. It has forms, fee charts, and court calendars. Wailuku sits on the eCourt Kokua network for remote searches. Walk-in terminals at Hoapili Hale work too during the 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekday window.
Wailuku Contact Info
Key phone and address info for Wailuku 72 Hour Booking looks like this:
- Maui Police HQ: 55 Mahalani Street, Wailuku, HI 96793, (808) 244-6400
- MCCC Jail: 600 Waiale Drive, Wailuku, HI 96793, (808) 243-5861
- Hoapili Hale Court: 2145 Main Street, Wailuku, HI 96793, (808) 244-2752
- Hoapili Hale Fax: (808) 244-2932
The Maui PD Records Section runs 7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. weekdays. The front desk at the HQ stays open 24 hours a day for custody calls and emergency report drop-offs. Hoapili Hale Room 106 takes walk-in records requests 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays. MCCC visit hours vary by housing unit, so call first.
For online tools, see the eCourt Kokua portal and the Hawaii SAVIN alerts system. Both help trace a Wailuku arrest from the first booking through court and jail.
Note: Wailuku sits in the heart of central Maui, so records requests for Kahului and Kihei also funnel to the same HQ desk at 55 Mahalani Street.
Nearby Cities on Maui
Other Maui towns use the same Wailuku-based records system. Each has its own page with local contacts.
Kahului sits a short drive north. Kihei sits on the south shore. Both tie back to the same Maui PD records desk, MCCC cellblock, and Hoapili Hale court as Wailuku.
