Search Maui County 72 Hour Booking
Maui County 72 Hour Booking records cover every adult arrest logged by the Maui Police Department on Maui, Molokai, and Lanai. You can search booking data by name or file a records request with the MPD Records Section in Wailuku. The Maui Community Correctional Center keeps the live inmate roster for the county. Court filings that follow the booking show up at the Second Circuit Court in Hoapili Hale. Statewide tools like eCourt Kokua, eCrim, and Hawaii SAVIN round out the search path.
Maui County 72 Hour Booking Stats
Maui Police 72 Hour Booking Records
Maui Police Department keeps arrest reports, booking info, and investigative files for every adult taken in on Maui, Molokai, or Lanai. The MPD Records Section works out of the Wailuku HQ at 55 Mahalani Street. To get a Maui County 72 Hour Booking record, you can visit in person Monday through Thursday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. You can also send a request by fax to (808) 244-6418 or by mail. The main MPD line is (808) 244-6400, the fax is (808) 244-5576, and the email is crs@mpd.net.
Every mail or fax request must list a phone number, an email, and a copy of a valid photo ID. MPD aims to process each request within 10 business days. For faster turnaround, walk in during open hours. The Records Section can pull booking reports, mugshots, and bond info tied to any intake at the Wailuku station.
For the state-level forms that feed a Maui record pull, see the HCJDC forms page.
The HCJDC forms page holds the HCJDC-073 record check form and the HCJDC-159(b) expungement form. Both tie into the arrest history work that follows a Maui booking.
Note: MPD Records Section in Wailuku is open Monday to Thursday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., so plan your 72 Hour Booking request visit during those hours.
MCCC Inmate Roster and 72 Hour Booking
The Maui Community Correctional Center holds people after the 72 Hour Booking window closes. MCCC sits at 600 Waiale Drive, Wailuku, HI 96793. Call (808) 243-5861 to check on a held person. The facility is run by the Hawaii Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. MCCC has capacity for about 301 people but runs above that most days. Average daily population is close to 363, which puts MCCC at 120.6% of rated capacity.
Roughly 58% of the people at MCCC are pretrial. The other 42% are serving short sentences or awaiting sentencing. That split means the MCCC roster is where you check if a person moved out of the short HPD or MPD cellblock window and into longer-term county custody. The Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation site posts the full roster online.
For custody alerts tied to MCCC holds, sign up on Hawaii SAVIN.
SAVIN sends free alerts when a Maui inmate's status changes. Enter a name or offender ID to sign up for phone, email, or text updates on transfers, releases, and parole hearings.
Once the state takes custody, Hawaii SAVIN alerts kick in. You can sign up free for phone, text, or email alerts on transfers and releases. SAVIN does not pull live MPD cellblock data, so you still need to check the MPD Records Section for the first 72 hours.
Maui County Criminal Records Access
Maui criminal records flow through the Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center. Under HRS § 846-9, arrests that end in a conviction are public. Non-conviction arrests stay private unless the person asks for their own copy. That rule shapes what you can get from HCJDC for any Maui County 72 Hour Booking.
Online search on eCrim costs $5 per name search. You can search by name, date of birth, Social Security number, or gender. Narrow search data gets better hits. Certified records run $10 to $12. A name-based check on paper costs $30. A fingerprint check costs $55 in office or $35 by mail. MPD also does fingerprinting for $25.
See the HCJDC name-based check page for the full step list. The page lists every fee, every form, and every ID rule tied to a Maui arrest history pull.
HCJDC sits at 465 S. King Street, Room 102, Honolulu, HI 96813. Call (808) 587-3279 to book an appointment. Fingerprints go by appointment only. Mail requests take 3 to 5 business days once the print card arrives. See the HCJDC page for the full set of state rules.
Maui Jail and Booking Intake
The Maui jail complex ties in with the Wailuku MPD HQ at 55 Mahalani Street, Wailuku, HI 96793. Arrestees pass through the cellblock before transport to court or MCCC. For arrest reports and police records tied to the intake, call the MPD Records Section at (808) 244-6400. The fax is (808) 244-5576. Email is crs@mpd.net. The same facility handles inmate booking, mugshots, and bond info.
Molokai and Lanai arrests also route through Maui. Molokai has a small police station in Kaunakakai. Lanai has a substation in Lanai City. Bookings from those islands transfer to Wailuku for processing. That is why every Maui County 72 Hour Booking record pulls from the Wailuku file, no matter which island the arrest took place on.
Short-term holds last up to 48 hours before a charging call. Some holds stretch to 72 hours when a judge must review the file. Once the short window ends, many people move to MCCC on the same Wailuku campus.
Note: Maui County 72 Hour Booking intake for Molokai and Lanai arrests routes through the Wailuku HQ, so all records sit in one file.
Maui 72 Hour Booking Public Records
The County of Maui handles formal public records requests through the Office of Council Services. OCS must respond to a request within 10 business days. In rare cases with heavy files, the office has 20 business days. Questions go to OCS at (808) 270-7838 or to ocs.request@mauicounty.us.
To file a request, use the online portal on the county site. Include your full name, mailing address, phone, email, and a copy of a photo ID. Say what type of record you want and give a date range. For a Maui County 72 Hour Booking record, list the date of arrest, the name of the arrestee, and any case number you have.
Start at the Maui public records request page.
The page shows the online form, the mailing address, and the fee note. It also has links to the UIPA rules that drive the whole process.
All requests fall under HRS § 92F, the Uniform Information Practices Act. See the full law on the Hawaii Revised Statutes site. Under § 92F-11, records are open unless the law closes them. Section § 92F-13 lists the limits. Read the UIPA guide for a deep look.
Second Circuit Court 72 Hour Booking Cases
Once a Maui County 72 Hour Booking turns into a case, the filings show up at the Second Circuit Court. The courthouse, Hoapili Hale, sits at 2145 Main Street, Wailuku, Maui 96793-1679. The Legal Documents Branch is in Room 106. The phone is 808-244-2752 and the fax is 808-244-2932. In-person hours are 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday to Friday.
Document fees at the clerk's office run $3 flat for any document 1 to 30 pages long. Each page after that costs $0.10. If you need frequent access, a subscription to JIMS costs $125 per quarter or $500 per year. The subscription gives online access to the same court files the clerks pull in person.
To search filings for free, use eCourt Kokua. The tool covers traffic, District Court, Circuit Court, and Family Court. Search by case number, party name, or attorney name. You can track the case from the first hearing through sentencing or dismissal.
Nearby Hawaii Counties
Maui sits at the center of the main Hawaiian chain. 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 Maui County
Each city page links to the right MPD substation, local court branch, and nearby services. Pick a city to see local contacts and steps.