Find 72 Hour Booking in Waipahu

Waipahu 72 Hour Booking records come from the Honolulu Police Department, which covers the town under HPD District 3. Arrests show up on the HPD daily arrest log, which rolls 14 days before the data cycles off. The Records and Identification Division keeps older files. Most Waipahu bookings pass through the Alapai HQ cellblock before moving to OCCC for longer hold. Court cases are heard at the Pearl City District Court or at First Circuit Court on Punchbowl, and you can pull any case on eCourt Kokua.

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Waipahu 72 Hour Booking Stats

43K Population
3 HPD District
Pearl City District Court
OCCC Cellblock

Waipahu 72 Hour Booking HPD Coverage

Waipahu sits inside HPD District 3, which covers the Pearl City and Waipahu side of central Oahu. The town has a large population and sees regular police activity, so the daily arrest log often carries several Waipahu names each week. Each entry lists the person's name, age, sex, race, the arresting officer, the offense, and the report number. The log runs 14 days before it rotates off the HPD site.

The main HPD site is at honolulupd.org. For the rolling log, go to the arrest logs page. Non-emergency reports can be filed through the Online Citizen Police Report System. Call 911 for any crime in progress. The Records and Identification Division keeps the full archived file. Their office is at 801 S. Beretania Street, Honolulu, HI 96813. The phone is (808) 723-3258. Read more on the Records Division page.

HPD runs the same booking flow across Oahu. Waipahu arrests pass through the same Central Receiving Division at Alapai HQ as every other district. Staff log the arrest, take prints and a mugshot, and assign an Offender Tracking Number. Most people held at Alapai for more than a few hours move on to OCCC. The Records Division keeps the paper and digital file for every booking, win or loss in court.

Hawaii State Judiciary site for Waipahu 72 Hour Booking court records

Visit the Hawaii State Judiciary site for links to eCourt Kokua and each courthouse. The Waipahu court sits under the District Court map in Pearl City.

OCCC and Waipahu 72 Hour Booking Intake

The Oahu Community Correctional Center is at 2199 Kamehameha Highway, Honolulu, HI 96819. The main phone is (808) 832-1623. OCCC is the main jail for Oahu and takes in each Waipahu detainee who does not post bail or win release within the 72-hour window. The jail holds both pretrial detainees and sentenced inmates. Intake runs around the clock.

OCCC inmate records can be pulled in person, by mail, or by phone. Have the full legal name and date of birth ready for a phone check. The jail does not post a full live public roster online, so calls and mail work best. For the next stage of tracking, use Hawaii SAVIN. SAVIN is free and sends alerts when a Waipahu defendant's custody status changes. You can get notice by phone, text, or email. SAVIN picks up once the person moves into the state corrections system.

Note: Transfers from the Alapai HQ cellblock to OCCC can take a few hours. If the SAVIN feed has not yet caught the move, call OCCC to confirm.

Waipahu 72 Hour Booking Court Filings

The Waipahu District Court sits at the Pearl City court complex, 870 4th Street, Pearl City, HI 96782. The court hears misdemeanor cases, traffic violations, and preliminary felony proceedings for Waipahu. Most 72 Hour Booking arraignments run here before the case moves up for felony review. Court records can be pulled on site or online through eCourt Kokua.

The search tool is at eCourt Kokua. The portal covers traffic, District Court, Circuit Court, and Family Court. Search by party name, case number, or attorney name. The case ID format has 12 characters, with a circuit digit, a case type code, and padded numbers. A traffic case will look different from a felony case in the ID, but eCourt Kokua pulls both kinds of records for a Waipahu name.

Felony cases that survive District Court review move up to the First Circuit Court at 777 Punchbowl Street, Honolulu. That court runs the grand jury and takes every Oahu felony trial. Waipahu cases follow the same path. The case ID stays with the file as it moves from district to circuit, so a search on eCourt Kokua will catch the record at either stage. Certified copies of court paper cost a small fee per page.

Waipahu 72 Hour Booking History Searches

For past Hawaii convictions tied to any Waipahu arrest, use eCrim. Each search is $5 and shows convictions and pending cases. A certified copy runs $12. Non-conviction arrest files will not show up. You can search by name, social security number, date of birth, or gender. Narrow criteria give better hits. Searches reset after 30 minutes of idle time, so plan before you pay.

For a full arrest history report, go through HCJDC, the Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center. Lead-in: read more about the criminal history check process below.

HCJDC criminal history records check for Waipahu 72 Hour Booking history

HCJDC issues criminal history abstracts, also called "Police Clearance" reports. Non-conviction arrests do not show up. Name-based checks are $30 in office or by mail. Fingerprint checks are $55 in office or $35 by mail. All prints are by appointment only.

Key Waipahu record tools to know:

  • HPD arrest log for the last 14 days
  • Records Division for older files
  • eCourt Kokua for any tied case
  • eCrim for past Hawaii convictions
  • SAVIN for custody alerts
  • HCJDC for the formal history report

Waipahu 72 Hour Booking Access Laws

Access to Waipahu booking data falls under HRS § 92F, the Uniform Information Practices Act. Read the full statute on the Hawaii Revised Statutes site. Under HRS § 92F-11, all government records are open to the public unless the law closes them. HRS § 92F-13 lists the exceptions. Those include records that would harm personal privacy or hurt a live investigation.

Non-conviction arrest data stays closed to third parties under HRS § 846-9. Only the person or their lawyer can pull those records. Records tied to a conviction stay open for life. The state-wide watchdog is the Office of Information Practices. Read their UIPA guide for a deep look at how each rule plays out. If a police or court office says no to a Waipahu request, you can file a complaint with OIP.

Juvenile arrest info never goes public under any county policy. That rule holds for every Waipahu booking of a person under 18. The file stays sealed, and even the arrest log leaves off the name.

Note: HPD redacts home address and social security numbers from public Waipahu arrest logs. The rest of the data under HRS § 92F-11 stays open.

Nearby Waipahu 72 Hour Booking Cities

Central and leeward Oahu has other towns that share the HPD system. Each page lists local stats and tie-ins to the same court and jail.

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