Find Recent Bookings in Kihei

Kihei is a major South Maui community along the shore between Maalaea and Wailea. Kihei recent bookings are handled by the Maui Police Department, which patrols Kihei from the main headquarters in Wailuku. To find Kihei recent bookings, file a request through the Maui County records portal or call MPD Records at (808) 244-6355. Arrestees held past 48 hours are sent to the Maui Community Correctional Center on Waiale Drive. Court cases tied to those bookings land at the Second Circuit Court at Hoapili Hale. Each office holds a different piece of the same file.

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Kihei Booking Overview

South Maui Patrol Area
MPD Lead Agency
MCCC County Jail
Second Circuit Court

Kihei Maui Police Patrol

Kihei is a long stretch of South Maui. It runs from Maalaea Bay down past Keawakapu Beach. The area has no separate city police force. Patrols for Kihei recent bookings come from Maui Police officers who report to the MPD headquarters in Wailuku.

MPD headquarters sits at 55 Mahalani Street, Wailuku, HI 96793. Main line: (808) 244-6400. The Records Section is the first stop for any Kihei recent bookings request. Phone for Records: (808) 244-6355. Note the schedule: Records runs Monday through Thursday, 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. The office is closed Friday through Sunday.

Kihei Recent Bookings via Maui Community Correctional Center

The DCR page links Kihei to the MCCC intake process. After a Kihei arrest, the person is transported to MPD for booking, then to MCCC if they are held. The drive from Kihei to Wailuku runs about 20 to 30 minutes, depending on traffic along Mokulele Highway.

Visit Maui Police Department for district info, forms, and records guidance. Standard copy fees run $0.25 per page. All mail requests go to MPD Records at 55 Mahalani St., Wailuku, HI 96793.

MCCC Custody After a Kihei Arrest

Arrestees from Kihei who cannot post bail are transported to the Maui Community Correctional Center. MCCC sits at 600 Waiale Drive, Wailuku, HI 96793. Phone: (808) 243-5861. The facility holds pretrial detainees and sentenced inmates from across Maui County.

MCCC has an operational capacity of about 301 inmates. Recent figures show the jail running over capacity, with an average daily population close to 363. About 58% of detainees are pretrial and 42% are post-conviction. Felonies make up about 53% of offenses. Kihei recent bookings count toward the MCCC intake total along with bookings from Kahului, Wailuku, Lahaina, Hana, Makawao, Lanai, and Molokai.

Visit Maui Community Correctional Center for visit schedules, mail rules, and contact info. MCCC is run by the Hawaii Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.

Kihei Recent Bookings via Maui Police Department

The MPD page shows the booking path from arrest through MCCC. To track someone in custody, use Hawaii SAVIN. Sign up at Hawaii SAVIN. The service runs on the VINE platform. It is free. You get alerts by phone, text, or email when status changes.

Under HRS Chapter 803, each person booked must be brought before a judge within 48 hours. That window sets the speed of most Kihei recent bookings.

Kihei Online Records Portal

Maui County runs an online records portal that lets you file a request for Kihei recent bookings without a trip to Wailuku. The portal uses the GovQA platform.

Visit the Maui County Public Records Portal to start. You will need to make an account, pick Maui Police Department as the agency, and describe the records you want. The portal lets you track the request and pull responsive documents when ready. For a Kihei booking, include the full name, the arrest date, and any case number you have.

Under HRS Chapter 92F, the agency must reply within 10 business days. Complex requests may need extra time. Fees may apply for search time, copies, certifications, and mail.

Arrest records that led to a conviction are public under HRS Chapter 846. Non-conviction info, like a Kihei recent booking that did not lead to a charge, has restricted access.

Note: The GovQA portal is the best path for routine Kihei recent bookings requests; in-person visits to the Wailuku office are open only four days a week.

Second Circuit Court for Kihei Cases

Criminal cases from Kihei recent bookings are processed through the Second Circuit Court in Wailuku. The court sits at Hoapili Hale, 2145 Main Street, Wailuku, HI 96793. Phone: (808) 244-2929. Hours run Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

District Court at the same building handles misdemeanor and traffic cases from Kihei. The court keeps records for charges filed, hearing dates, pleas, trial records, sentencing, and final case dispositions.

For online case info, visit eCourt Kokua. The system covers Second Circuit cases. Search by case ID, citation number, or party name. The Clerk of Court charges a $5 search fee. Copies cost $1 for the first page and 50 cents per added page.

After a Kihei arrest, the case goes to the Maui County Department of the Prosecuting Attorney for review. The office is at 150 South High Street, Wailuku. Phone: (808) 270-7777. The prosecutor decides what charges to file and runs the case from charging through sentencing.

Kihei Criminal History and Tips

For an official summary of an adult conviction tied to a Kihei arrest, the Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center is the source. Visit HCJDC. Phone: (808) 587-3279. The office sits at the Kekuanaoa Building, 465 S. King Street, Room 102, Honolulu, HI 96813.

The Maui Police Department also hosts a Public Access Site for HCJDC record checks at headquarters. Visit HCJDC Public Access Sites for the full list. Each printout costs $25. The Maui site can be reached at (808) 244-6345.

For anonymous tips on a Kihei recent booking or wanted person, Maui Crime Stoppers takes calls at (808) 242-6966. Cash rewards are paid for info that leads to an arrest. The program covers Maui, Lanai, and Molokai.

Under state retention rules, arrests that led to a conviction stay on file for life. Arrests with no charge or with a dismissal stay on file for at least 5 years. Booking photos are kept with the matching arrest record, and fingerprint cards are held for life. Older Maui County court files can be pulled through the State Judiciary Records Section or the Hawaii State Archives.

The trip from a Kihei arrest to a full booking runs through a short set of steps. First, MPD officers make the stop or respond to a call. Then they bring the person to the Wailuku station for booking. Officers take fingerprints, photos, and charge info. The booking record is entered in MPD's system. A charge or release call is made within 48 hours.

If the person is held, they move to MCCC. If bail is set, they can post it to get out before the first hearing. Most Kihei recent bookings then move to court within a few days. The case file grows at each step. An arrest log entry is the first record. A full police report is the second. A court filing is the third. Each one sits in a different office.

For records tied to all three steps, you may need to reach out to more than one agency. The MPD Records Section holds the arrest record. The court clerk holds the court record. MCCC tracks the jail side. A single records request cannot pull all three at once, but the same name and case number link them together.

Note: Many Kihei incidents reported to MPD do not end in an arrest or a booking; some lead to a citation or a warning instead.

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Other Cities in Maui County

Maui County covers the islands of Maui, Lanai, and Molokai. The cities below use the same MPD system and the same MCCC jail.

For the full county view, see Maui County.