Honolulu County 72 Hour Booking
Honolulu County 72 Hour Booking data covers every adult arrest logged by the Honolulu Police Department on Oahu. HPD posts a daily arrest log and keeps a live custody record at the Central Receiving Division on Alapai Street. You can search by name or scan the daily PDF to find who is held, the charge filed, and the report number. The log runs 14 days before it rotates out, so act fast. Court filings that follow the booking show up on eCourt Kokua, and past history sits on eCrim.
Honolulu County 72 Hour Booking Stats
HPD Daily Arrest Log for 72 Hour Booking
The first place to look for Honolulu County 72 Hour Booking data is the HPD daily arrest log. Each morning the IT Division pulls booking data from the prior day and posts it as a PDF. The file lists the date and time of arrest, the name, age, sex, and race of the arrestee, the arresting officer, the nature of the offense, and the report number. Booking and release codes sit next to each entry so you can tell if the person is still in custody or has been cut loose.
Start with the HPD Arrest Logs page. You can also look up offense codes through links on that same page to the Hawaii Revised Statutes and the Revised Ordinances of Honolulu. The logs do not include federal or military arrests, so Pearl Harbor and base bookings go through other channels. Juvenile arrest info never goes public, per county policy and state law.
The page shows how each PDF is dated and stacked for the public. Each log file holds the full booking slate for that 24-hour window. Note the search bar near the top for quick keyword hits.
Note: HPD arrest logs rotate off the public page 14 days after they post, so save any 72 Hour Booking record you need within that window.
Public Access Policy for 72 Hour Booking Logs
HPD has a written policy on how it shares 72 Hour Booking data. The rules come out of HRS § 92F-11, which opens all government records unless the law closes them. Under the HPD policy, adult arrest logs must list the same core set of fields for every booking. That includes the date and time of arrest, the arrestee's name, age, sex, and race, the arresting officer, the offense, and the report number.
Logs sit at the Central Receiving Division security post 24 hours a day for walk-in review. The same logs get uploaded to the HPD website each morning. Paper copies rotate out after 14 days. The digital copies follow the same cycle. That short window is why reporters and the public check the site daily.
The policy page spells out the fields that appear in every log and why the 14-day window exists. It also notes the juvenile carve-out. No juvenile info is ever posted under any policy.
Section § 92F-13 lists the limits. Records that would harm a live case, hurt personal privacy, or give up the identity of a source can be held back. The Office of Information Practices handles disputes. Read the UIPA guide for a deep look at how these rules work.
Central Receiving Division Cellblock
The Central Receiving Division runs the main HPD cellblock at Alapai headquarters. Arrested adults get brought here to be booked, fingerprinted, and held until bail or court. The cellblock is short-term only. If a person cannot post bail, they get moved to First Circuit Court the next working day. From court, many end up at the Oahu Community Correctional Center.
To find out if someone is held at an HPD facility, call the district station for that area. Alapai HQ (Main) is 723-3000. Kalihi Station is 723-8208. Pearl City Station is 723-8800. Wahiawa Station is 723-8700. Kaneohe Station is 723-8640. Kailua Substation is 723-8838. Kapolei Station is 723-8525. Kahuku Substation is 723-8650. Waianae is 723-8600. Each line can check the on-site booking log.
The Central Receiving page on the HPD site gives hours, contact info, and a brief tour of the booking flow. The cellblock staff works 24 hours a day, so call any time.
Once a person is moved from the HPD cellblock to Hawaii SAVIN tracking starts. SAVIN covers transfers and release alerts. The short window before state custody is when the HPD log is your only quick tool.
HPD Records Division and 72 Hour Booking Reports
The Records and Identification Division holds older arrest files and formal police reports that do not sit in the daily 72 Hour Booking log. For a full arrest record summary, though, you have to go to the Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center. HCJDC sits in the Kekuanao'a Building at 465 S. King Street, Room 102, Honolulu, HI 96813. Call (808) 587-3279 to set up a request.
Police reports not online cost $0.50 for the first page and $0.25 for each page after that. Pay by cash, personal check, or cashier's check. The Records Division runs Monday to Friday, 7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Walk-in service works best for short requests.
The Records Division page lists address, hours, and contact data. It also links to request forms you can fill out in person.
You can also pull past conviction data through HCJDC for a fee. Non-conviction arrests do not appear in those reports, per HRS § 846-9. For past arrest hits online, use eCrim at $5 per search.
Honolulu County 72 Hour Booking Police Reports
HPD runs an Online Citizen Police Report System for non-emergency incidents. Staff work on these reports Monday to Friday, not on holidays. Most reports take 2 business days to finish. For more urgent help, call the Records Division at (808) 723-3258 during business hours.
To get a detailed report tied to a 72 Hour Booking, you can send a written request. Include a copy of your ID (driver's license, passport, or state ID). The request letter must be signed and notarized. Full payment is due before the release of any file. Large requests may need a deposit up front.
The police reports page has a list of request steps, forms, and the office mailing address. Mail requests to HPD, Attn: Records Division - Records Request, 801 South Beretania Street, Honolulu, HI 96813.
Per UIPA, HRS § 92F-13, all released copies have personal info blacked out. Names, home addresses, Social Security numbers, dates of birth, and phone numbers come out before release. All juvenile info comes out as well. The requestor's own info stays in.
Honolulu 72 Hour Booking Arrest Report Flow
HPD makes an arrest report each time an adult is taken in for any state statute or county ordinance. The same rule covers holds for other reasons, like MH-1 or MH-2 mental health holds, federal holds, or state holds. When a person is booked on a warrant, a separate arrest report comes out for each warrant.
Each arrest gets a unique Offender Tracking Number, or OTN. The person is photographed and fingerprinted before the booking system adds the arrest. HPD uses the Livescan System for prints. The mugshot and prints go into the file before the OTN is locked in. All of this builds the core 72 Hour Booking record.
The arrest report policy page lays out the steps from arrest to log. It covers what triggers a new report and how the OTN gets assigned. The flow is the same at every district station.
District stations that make arrests include District 1 (Chinatown) at 808-723-3311, District 2 (Wahiawa) at 808-723-8700, District 3 (Pearl City) at 808-723-8800, District 4 (Kaneohe, Kailua, Kahuku), District 5 (Kalihi) at 808-723-8208, District 6 (Waikiki Substation) at 808-723-3345, District 7 (Kaimuki) at 808-723-3361, and District 8 (Kapolei, Waianae). Each station feeds its arrests into the same central log.
Note: Each new warrant triggers a separate Honolulu County 72 Hour Booking arrest report, so a single intake may generate more than one report.
Wanted Persons List and 72 Hour Booking Leads
HPD keeps a Wanted Persons List on its website. The list names people police want to arrest and lists the charges. It fills the gap between the daily arrest log and the long-term court system. If you are trying to track a name that does not appear in the daily 72 Hour Booking log, check here.
The page shows each subject's name, a photo when one is on file, and the active warrant charges. Updates come as warrants are issued or served.
Anyone with a tip on a wanted person can call HPD. Crime Stoppers works as a tip line too. Once the subject is arrested, their name moves from the Wanted Persons List to the daily arrest log. That is the point when a new 72 Hour Booking record starts.
Oahu Community Correctional Center After 72 Hour Booking
Once the HPD 72 Hour Booking window closes, many arrestees move to the Oahu Community Correctional Center. OCCC sits at 2199 Kamehameha Highway, Honolulu, HI 96819. Call (808) 832-1777 or (808) 832-1623 to check on a held person. OCCC is the primary detention site for Honolulu County. It houses pretrial detainees and inmates with shorter sentences.
For court filings after the booking, use eCourt Kokua. Cases can come before the First Circuit Court at 777 Punchbowl Street (Kaahumanu Hale), Honolulu, HI 96813. The Legal Documents Branch 1 phone is 808-539-4303. Minor cases go to the Honolulu District Court (Kauikeaouli Hale) at 1111 Alakea Street. That branch phone is 808-538-5149.
Sign up for Hawaii SAVIN alerts to track custody changes. SAVIN runs 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, and sends alerts by phone, text, or email. Alerts cover transfers, releases, and parole hearings.
Nearby Hawaii Counties
Oahu is the center of the state, but arrestees with ties to other islands may have records in other county systems. Check each county for its own 72 Hour Booking log and jail roster.
Cities in Honolulu County
Each city page links to the right HPD district station, local courthouse, and nearby services. Pick a city to see local contacts and steps.