Find Makakilo 24 Hour Booking Records
Makakilo 24 hour booking records come from HPD District 8 in Kapolei. Makakilo sits on a hillside above Kapolei in West Oahu, a residential town with homes climbing the slope of the Waianae range. District 8 patrol runs the first arrest stop. Then the booking moves down to HPD Central Receiving in Honolulu for the full 24 hour booking desk. Makakilo 24 hour booking entries land on the same daily HPD log as every other Oahu arrest, with the name, offense, and time stamped for 14 days. Use this page to pull the log and track any case.
Makakilo 24 Hour Booking Overview
Makakilo HPD District 8 Coverage
Makakilo sits on a hillside in West Oahu. Homes line the slope of the Waianae range. HPD District 8 runs patrol for the town, working out of the Kapolei station a few minutes down the hill. The district covers Kapolei, Makakilo, Ewa Beach, Nanakuli, and Waianae. Officers from District 8 handle every arrest that starts a Makakilo 24 hour booking.
The hillside terrain shapes the work. Patrol teams watch the twisty Kalaeloa roads and the older residential streets higher on the slope. Community policing focuses on burglary prevention and traffic calming in dead-end streets. HPD coordinates with the Honolulu Fire Department on hillside emergencies since brush fires and mud slides can cut off roads. If a person is arrested in Makakilo, officers move them to the District 8 station first.
Short climb up, short drive down. The booking still ends at Beretania Street.
From the District 8 station, the person goes to HPD Central Receiving at 801 South Beretania Street in Honolulu. Central Receiving runs the full 24 hour booking desk for every Oahu arrest. Fingerprints, mugshot, and booking number all happen here. HPD main line is (808) 529-3191. The Records and Identification Division shares the same building.
If the Honolulu Prosecuting Attorney files charges, the person moves to Oahu Community Correctional Center for pretrial hold. OCCC is the main pretrial jail for Oahu. The Department of Public Safety runs it.
The statewide Hawaii Records US portal above pulls together arrest, court, and booking data for the whole state, which includes every Makakilo 24 hour booking logged by HPD. It is a starting point for name-based searches that cross county lines across Oahu, the Big Island, Maui, and Kauai.
Note: Makakilo 24 hour booking logs are not posted to a town-level page. Pull them from the HPD daily arrest log within 14 days.
How to Search Makakilo 24 Hour Booking Logs
Start with HPD. The daily arrest log is a single PDF for the whole island. It posts to the HPD arrest logs page. Each entry shows the name, age, sex, race, arrest time, offense, and report number. Files stay for 14 days, then drop off.
For logs older than 14 days, send a written records request to the HPD Records and Identification Division at 801 South Beretania Street, Honolulu, HI 96813. Include a clear copy of your ID, the case or report number, and a signed request form. Response runs about 10 business days under UIPA. The HPD police reports page has the steps.
For conviction history tied to a Makakilo 24 hour booking, run an eCrim check. The Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center keeps the state conviction database. Name searches run $5. Certified reports are $12. For a fingerprint check, plan on $35 in person or $55 by mail. The HCJDC criminal history check page lists all the paths.
To track a court case after a Makakilo arrest, try eCourt Kokua. Cases filed in First Circuit Court show up by defendant name. Free to view. Downloads cost $3 for the first 30 pages.
The Hawaii Court Records US portal shown above focuses on court case records that follow a Makakilo 24 hour booking into First Circuit Court. Data pulls together across all four main islands for name-based searches, so it can catch a case filed under a past address in Honolulu or Hilo.
Makakilo First Circuit Court
The First Circuit Court handles every Makakilo criminal case. Felonies are heard at 777 Punchbowl Street in Honolulu. Misdemeanors may go to Honolulu District Court or to the Kapolei District Court at the Ronald T.Y. Moon Kapolei Courthouse. Family Court cases from Makakilo also run through the Kapolei courthouse at 4675 Kapolei Parkway.
The Hawaii State Judiciary runs a self-help center at most courthouses. Clerks cannot give legal advice but can point you to the right form and explain filing fees. Cases post to eCourt Kokua. Sealed files and juvenile cases do not show on the public portal under HRS chapter 846.
Bail hearings happen within 48 hours of a Makakilo 24 hour booking. If bail is posted, the person walks free pending trial. If not, the person stays at OCCC. The VINE Link system sends free alerts when custody status changes.
48 Hour Rule: Hawaii law gives police 48 hours after a Makakilo 24 hour booking to file charges. Past that window, the person must be released.
Typical records tied to a Makakilo 24 hour booking include the booking log, arrest report, booking photo, court docket, and any sentencing orders. Under UIPA most of these stay open to the public. Juvenile files, sealed cases, and arrests where no charges were filed stay off the public side.
Makakilo Local Resources
HPD District 8 in Kapolei is the closest station. The HPD main page lists the station address and phone. Walk-ins can ask about a recent report during business hours. Records pickup happens at Beretania Street in Honolulu.
For background checks tied to a past Makakilo 24 hour booking, the HCJDC public access site at the HPD Records Division is the closest walk-in option. Each printout is $25. HCJDC also runs eCrim online. The HRS chapter 846 sets the fees and access rules.
Main phone numbers to know:
- HPD main line: (808) 529-3191
- HPD Records Division: (808) 529-3351
- VINE Link customer service: 1-877-846-3444
- Honolulu Prosecuting Attorney: (808) 768-7400
Legal aid comes from Legal Aid Society of Hawaii. The Oahu office sits at 924 Bethel Street in downtown Honolulu. Intake is by phone or online for people with low income. The Public Defender Office at 1130 North Nimitz Highway handles court-appointed cases for people who cannot afford a lawyer.
The Makakilo Neighborhood Board meets monthly and hears community safety concerns. HPD Community Policing Team 8 attends most meetings. That team handles non-arrest issues like traffic calming, parking complaints, and crime prevention outreach.
Makakilo Nearby Cities
Makakilo shares HPD District 8 with three other West Oahu towns. Each one runs its 24 hour booking through Kapolei and then through HPD Central Receiving.

