Find 24 Hour Booking in Kaneohe
Kaneohe 24 hour booking records track adults just taken into custody in the windward Oahu area by the Honolulu Police Department District 4 station. The station in Kailua runs patrol, marine patrol for Kaneohe Bay, and community policing across Kaneohe and neighboring towns. Every arrest made in Kaneohe moves through HPD Central Receiving for intake, then to the Oahu Community Correctional Center. Use this page to find Kaneohe 24 hour booking data, the right agency contacts, and the tools to search by name or report number.
Kaneohe 24 Hour Booking Overview
Where Kaneohe 24 Hour Booking Data Lives
Kaneohe 24 hour booking data lives in the same system as the rest of Oahu. HPD District 4 in Kailua runs patrol for Kaneohe. Arrests made in town get taken to the District 4 station first. From there the adult arrest moves to Central Receiving at HPD headquarters on South Beretania. Central Receiving handles fingerprints, mugshots, and full intake. The booking then posts to the daily HPD arrest log on the public site.
HPD handles marine patrol on Kaneohe Bay too. The bay is the largest sheltered body of water in the main Hawaiian islands, so the agency runs a boat crew to answer calls on the water. Arrests made on the bay still route back through District 4 and Central Receiving. Every Kaneohe 24 hour booking sits in the daily HPD log, which rotates off the site after 14 days.
For jail custody status, male detainees from Kaneohe go to the Oahu Community Correctional Center in Kalihi. Women go to the Women's Community Correctional Center in Kailua. Both facilities feed into VINE Link for custody alerts. The state Department of Public Safety runs both jails.
Note: Kaneohe bookings show up in the same HPD daily log as every other Oahu arrest. Scan for the Kaneohe address or District 4 code to spot them fast.
What Kaneohe Booking Records Show
A Kaneohe 24 hour booking record holds the first details captured right after arrest. These files cover the 24 to 48 hour window from intake to charge or release. Police use the state 48 hour rule to charge the person or let them go.
Every booking record lists the arrestee's full legal name, date of birth, sex, race, and physical description. It shows the home address, arresting officer name, agency, and the time and place of the arrest. A mugshot and full set of fingerprints are taken at intake. Any personal property gets logged in the inventory. Bail info comes next. The bail amount, type, and any judge-set conditions all sit in the file. For jail transfers, the record lists the facility name and cell block.
The typical Kaneohe booking report field list looks like this:
- Full legal name, date of birth, sex, race
- Physical description, mugshot, fingerprints
- Arrest date, time, and location
- Arresting officer and agency
- Charge or statute cited at intake
- Bail amount and bail conditions
- Booking number and facility assignment
The legal framework for this data is the same across every Hawaii county. Each county police department runs its own records division, but all follow the same state rules on access, fees, and dissemination. The resources below show how arrest records look in other Hawaii counties, and the same format applies to Kaneohe 24 hour booking reports.
The Hawaii records resource above lays out how statewide arrest records and 24 hour booking logs read across agencies. The layout used for Hawaii County bookings mirrors the one HPD uses for Kaneohe arrests, since all county agencies follow the same state open records rules.
Kaneohe 24 Hour Booking and HPD District 4
HPD District 4 serves Kaneohe, Kailua, Lanikai, Kahaluu, and Waimanalo. The main station sits in Kailua, and the district is the busiest on the windward side. Officers run patrol for residential, commercial, and beach calls. Marine patrol handles the bay. Community policing officers work with neighborhood boards and local schools.
Call HPD main at (808) 529-3191 for help on any Kaneohe 24 hour booking. The District 4 main line can confirm if a person was taken into custody but cannot give out report numbers over the phone. For written reports, go to HPD Records at 801 South Beretania Street in Honolulu. Records is open Monday through Friday from 7:45 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
The HPD arrest logs page posts adult booking data within a few hours of intake. Each PDF file shows every arrest on the island for a given date. Scan the list for a Kaneohe address or for the charge filed by District 4 officers. The file names use the date, so you can step back day by day.
For older reports, file a written request through the HPD police reports page. Bring a color copy of your ID, the case or report number, and a signed request form. HPD fills most requests within ten business days. Copy fees run $0.50 for the first page and $0.25 for each extra page.
48 Hour Charge Rule: Kaneohe police have 48 hours to charge a person with a crime after the arrest. The 24 hour booking log covers that window, so data shifts fast as people post bail or move to OCCC.
Public Access Rules
The Uniform Information Practices Act in HRS chapter 92F sets the open records rule for every Kaneohe 24 hour booking. UIPA says all government records stay open to public inspection unless the law says otherwise. The Office of Information Practices hears appeals when an agency denies a record request.
Under UIPA, HPD has ten working days to respond to a records request for Kaneohe booking data. If the request is too big, the agency can add twenty more working days. You get that extension in writing. The rule covers most booking records older than 14 days.
The Hawaii Revised Statutes chapter 846 sets the rules for the state criminal history repository. HRS § 846-9 says conviction data is public but non-conviction arrest data stays confidential. HRS § 846-14 makes improper sharing of protected criminal history a misdemeanor. These rules apply to every Kaneohe booking that feeds the state repository.
Arrests that led to a conviction stay public under state law. Arrests where charges were dropped or never filed come off the public record. Juvenile booking files are sealed. Sexual assault victim names get redacted. Ongoing investigations may be held back. Mental health holds and civil protective custody stay confidential too.
The Maui records resource above shows a sample of how arrest and 24 hour booking data reads in another Hawaii county. The same fields, format, and legal rules apply to Kaneohe bookings since every county follows the same UIPA and HRS 846 framework.
First Circuit Court Handles Kaneohe Cases
Every Kaneohe 24 hour booking that leads to a charge ends up in First Circuit Court. First Circuit covers all of Oahu. The main Kaahumanu Hale building at 777 Punchbowl Street in Honolulu holds most felony trials. District Court at 1111 Alakea Street handles misdemeanors and initial felony hearings. Family Court handles domestic and juvenile matters.
The eCourt Kokua portal is the free online tool to search court cases tied to Kaneohe arrests. Look up by full name or case number. The docket shows each hearing, motion, and order. Case searches cost nothing. Document downloads run $3 for the first 30 pages.
The Hawaii State Judiciary site lists court hours, forms, and directions. Clerk hours run 7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Bail payment goes through the cashier at the circuit court. Bondsmen post bail at the jail or courthouse.
Custody Alerts for Kaneohe Bookings
VINE Link gives real-time custody alerts tied to any Kaneohe 24 hour booking. Sign up once and the service sends alerts when the inmate is released, moved, or brought back into custody. VINE is free, anonymous, and runs 24 hours a day.
You can reach VINE three ways. Call 1-877-846-3444 from any phone. Use the VINEmobile app on a phone or tablet. Go to vinelink.com on any browser. Hawaii uses the SAVIN brand, but the data and alerts are the same. Kaneohe bookings at OCCC or WCCC both show up.
Nearby Oahu Cities
Kaneohe sits on the windward side of Oahu. Other local cities with booking info include Kailua just down the coast, Urban Honolulu over the mountains, Mililani Town, Mililani Mauka, and Pearl City.

