Maui County 24 Hour Booking Records
Maui County 24 hour booking logs track every adult taken into custody across Maui, Molokai, and Lanai. The Maui Police Department runs the main cellblock at Wailuku, with support stations on the other two islands. Each booking entry shows who was arrested, when, and the charge filed at intake. Use this page to find the right police station, pull a recent Maui County 24 hour booking report, and follow the case into the Second Circuit Court. You can also check jail status at the Maui Community Correctional Center and request older records through the Office of Council Services.
Maui County 24 Hour Booking Overview
Maui Police Department Booking
The Maui Police Department runs all Maui County 24 hour booking from its headquarters at 55 Mahalani Street in Wailuku. The main phone line is (808) 244-6400. The Records Section takes calls at (808) 244-6345, and the fax line is (808) 244-6407. Records hours are Monday through Friday, 7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The office is closed on state holidays.
MPD handles bookings for all three islands in the county. Most arrests move through the Wailuku cellblock on Maui. The department logs each booking with a case number, the arresting officer, the time of arrest, and the charge filed at intake. A public access terminal sits at the Wailuku HQ. You can pull a criminal history printout there for $25. The printout is tied to the same HCJDC data the state uses.
The Maui County public records portal above is where you file a written request for older 24 hour booking logs. The Office of Council Services reviews each request under UIPA rules.
Note: MPD records close on weekends and state holidays. Plan your visit for a weekday morning if you need a walk-in printout of a Maui County booking record.
Molokai and Lanai Police Stations
Maui County covers three islands. Each one has its own police station tied back to MPD in Wailuku. The Molokai Police Station sits at 110 Aiona Street in Kaunakakai. Call (808) 553-5355 for non-emergency calls or booking questions on Molokai. The station handles intake and transfer for arrests made on the island.
The Lanai Police Station is at 855 Fraser Avenue in Lanai City. The phone number is (808) 565-6428. Arrests on Lanai are processed locally, then logged into the same Maui County 24 hour booking system. Most serious cases get transferred to Wailuku for pretrial holding at the Maui Community Correctional Center. If you need to report a non-emergency incident from any of the three islands, use the MPD file a report page or call the main line at (808) 244-6400.
For emergencies, dial 911. The smaller island stations keep shorter hours than Wailuku, so records requests from Molokai or Lanai often route back to the main MPD Records Section. Call ahead to confirm a walk-in time. Many records from these two islands sit in the same central database as Maui arrests.
How to Request Maui County Booking Records
Maui County 24 hour booking records go through two tracks. For recent arrests, contact MPD Records directly. For older files or other county records, file a request through the Maui County public records portal. The Office of Council Services (OCS) runs the portal and answers to UIPA rules under HRS chapter 92F.
To file through OCS, fill out the online form or write a descriptive request. Send it to ocs.request@mauicounty.us or call (808) 270-7838. OCS must respond within 10 business days. In extenuating circumstances, the office can take up to 20 business days to finish the search. The Office of Information Practices helpline at (808) 586-1400 takes calls if you have questions about a denial or delay.
Some Maui County booking data is off limits. OCS holds back files that fall under these common exemptions:
- Records that would invade personal privacy
- Files tied to current judicial proceedings
- Confidential records under state or federal law
- Medical and mental health information
- Active criminal investigation files
- Personnel records for county staff
For the content of a typical booking file, the Maui records arrest records page lists what an intake report usually contains. Expect to see the full name, date of birth, mugshot, fingerprints, charge, booking facility, and bail amount. The portal ties into Hawaii Administrative Rules § 2-71-19, which sets the search fee schedule at $5 to $25 depending on the type of search.
The eCourt Kokua portal above links the original Maui County 24 hour booking to the court case that follows. You can run a free name search for any party to a Second Circuit filing.
Maui Community Correctional Center
The Maui Community Correctional Center (MCCC) is the main jail for the county. It sits at 600 Waiale Drive in Wailuku. The main phone line is (808) 243-5101. A Visitor Hotline runs at (808) 243-5861 with updated rules for in-person visits. MCCC houses pretrial detainees and short-term sentenced inmates.
MCCC is part of the state Department of Public Safety. Most adults taken in a Maui County 24 hour booking end up at MCCC if they are not released right away. The facility serves the whole county, so arrests from Molokai and Lanai also transfer in. To check custody status or sign up for release alerts, use VINE Link. The free service runs 24 hours a day and sends text or email alerts when custody changes.
Bail info shows up in the Maui County 24 hour booking record itself. The judge may set a cash bail, a bond, or release on own recognizance. Once bail is posted at MCCC, the person gets released pending the next court date. Release times vary. Call the jail main line to check on a specific inmate if the VINE system has not updated.
Visiting MCCC: Call the Visitor Hotline at (808) 243-5861 before you drive out. Visit days, approved clothing, and ID rules change often, and the hotline has the latest info for each housing unit.
Second Circuit Court After Booking
After a Maui County 24 hour booking, the case moves to the Second Circuit Court. The main courthouse is Hoapili Hale at 2145 Main Street in Wailuku. Call (808) 244-2800 for the court clerk. The Second Circuit hears traffic, criminal, civil, family, land, and tax cases tied to the county.
Public access to court data runs through eCourt Kokua. The portal is free to search by name. You can see the case number, filing date, charge, court dates, and dispositions. Downloads of specific filings cost $3 for the first 30 pages. The Hawaii State Judiciary site also hosts forms, self help guides, and court calendars.
The Hawaii State Sheriffs also keep a Maui office at Hoapili Hale. The Sheriffs office is at 2145 Main Street, Wailuku, and the phone is (808) 244-2905. Service is by appointment on Fridays. Sheriffs handle court security, warrant service, and prisoner transport tied to the Second Circuit.
The Maui Prosecuting Attorney files charges and takes cases to trial. The office is at 210 Imi Kala Street in Wailuku. The main line is (808) 270-7777. Victim witness services staff coordinate with the SAVIN system to send alerts about hearings and release events.
Maui County Booking Record Fees
Fees for a Maui County 24 hour booking record depend on where you go. The public access terminal at MPD headquarters in Wailuku charges $25 for a criminal history printout. Name-based eCrim searches online run $5 each. A certified eCrim report is $12. Fingerprint checks cost more but catch records filed under aliases.
Under Hawaii Administrative Rules § 2-71-19, the search fee range for county records is $5 to $25 depending on the complexity. Requests that take staff time to redact or pull from archives may cost more. OCS sends a fee estimate before it fills a request so you can decide to go ahead or narrow the scope. Pay by check or money order made out to the County of Maui.
Here are the main Maui County 24 hour booking fees to know:
- MPD public access terminal printout: $25
- eCrim name-based search online: $5
- Certified eCrim report: $12
- OCS records search (simple): $5 to $10
- OCS records search (complex): up to $25
- Court document download on eCourt Kokua: $3 per 30 pages
If you need a full criminal history background check, the HCJDC criminal history records check offers name and fingerprint paths. Mail-in checks cost more and take longer than walking in to the Wailuku terminal.
Are Maui County 24 Hour Booking Records Public
Yes. Most Maui County 24 hour booking records are public under UIPA. The Hawaii Revised Statutes chapter 92F rule opens government records for public inspection unless another law blocks access. Daily arrest logs, booking reports, and custody status are open to anyone who asks.
Some Maui County booking data stays private. Juvenile arrests are sealed by law. Names of victims in sex crimes get redacted. Ongoing investigations may pull a file off the public side for a while. Mental health holds, civil protective custody, and sealed cases stay out of the public log. Arrests where no charges were filed come off the public side under HRS chapter 846. The state Sunshine Law in HRS chapter 92 also shapes which agency records stay open.
The Office of Information Practices hears appeals for denied requests. If OCS or MPD turns down a request, you can ask OIP to review the decision. The office publishes the UIPA manual and handles training for agencies across the state. Most Maui County 24 hour booking requests get answered within the 10 day window, with a 20 day extension only in hard cases.
For more context on what a booking file covers, see the Hawaii Court Records Maui arrest records page. It covers the same intake fields that MPD uses and ties them back to Second Circuit filings.
Maui County 24 hour booking records are open by default. Juvenile files, sealed cases, and arrests with no charges filed are the main exceptions under state law.
Maui Police Commission and Oversight
The Maui Police Commission oversees MPD. The commission publishes monthly statistics on calls for service, adult and juvenile arrests, charges by type, OVUII arrests, and warrant service. The reports break out felonies, misdemeanors, and petty misdemeanors, so you can see trends in Maui County 24 hour booking activity without pulling each case.
Maui County 24 hour booking data also ties back to the Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center. HCJDC keeps the central criminal history repository for the state. It coordinates with MPD, the Second Circuit, and MCCC to keep records in sync. That way a single booking entry shows up in the county log, the court docket, and the state criminal history file.
Note: monthly Police Commission reports cover the prior full month, so the latest booking trends may lag by four to six weeks. Check the MPD press page for faster updates on major cases.
Nearby Hawaii Counties
Maui County sits in the middle of the Hawaiian chain. Booking data from nearby counties ties into the same state systems. Pick a county below to see local contact info and search tools.

