Search Mililani Mauka Inmate Population

Mililani Mauka is an upper-elevation community on the central Oahu plateau, and its inmate population data is held by state and county agencies. Most adult bookings for Mililani Mauka flow through the Honolulu Police Department and end up at the Oahu Community Correctional Center (OCCC). This page lays out the tools you can use to find a current inmate, pull an arrest log, or request a full criminal history. Court records and custody alerts tie in too. Start any search with a name and date of birth.

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Mililani Mauka Overview

~22,000 Population
Honolulu County
OCCC Primary Facility
District 2 Police District

Mililani Mauka Inmate Population and State Custody

Mililani Mauka sits within the City and County of Honolulu, and the state runs all adult jails. The Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation holds custody of every adult arrested in Mililani Mauka. State law under HRS Chapter 353 sets the rules for how inmates are booked, housed, and moved. Every booking is entered in a shared database that staff update in real time.

The H-2 freeway runs south from Mililani down to the H-1 and then east to OCCC. Transport runs a few times a day. Most Mililani Mauka cases stay at OCCC through arraignment and bail review. Felony cases with long sentences shift to Halawa once the court enters judgment.

Family members who need to find a loved one should start with the state jail search or the VINELink tool. Both are free. Both run 24 hours a day. Both return results within a few seconds.

OCCC as the Main Mililani Mauka Facility

OCCC is the intake jail for Oahu. It holds pretrial defendants, sentenced misdemeanor inmates, and some pretrial felony cases. Mililani Mauka arrests almost always pass through OCCC first. The facility is on Dillingham Boulevard in urban Honolulu. Staff process new bookings around the clock.

Visitation at OCCC is set by housing module. Each module has two or three visit days. Visits must be booked ahead of time. You can find the current schedule on the DCR site. Dress rules apply and all visitors pass through a scan.

OCCC Oahu Community Correctional Center Mililani Mauka inmate population

Mail, money, and phone accounts are all run through the DCR inmate services page. Do not send cash. Use the GTL or Access Corrections portals for money. Phone calls are outbound only and use a pre-funded account.

HPD District 2 Coverage for Mililani Mauka

The Honolulu Police Department divides Oahu into eight patrol districts. Mililani Mauka and the rest of central Oahu fall under District 2. The Wahiawa Police Station is the hub, and substations cover the Mililani and Waipio areas. Patrol officers from District 2 handle Mililani Mauka arrests, traffic stops, and calls for service. The HPD main page has contact lines and report request forms.

HPD posts rolling arrest logs at every station under a public access policy. Logs cover the last 14 days. Older entries drop off each day. The log is a physical binder, and you can view it during business hours.

HPD also handles police report requests. Report copies cost $3 each. You can request a report online, by mail, or in person. The Records Division sits at the main headquarters on South Beretania Street in downtown Honolulu.

Note: HPD logs show arrest date, charge, and booking number, but not court outcomes. Use eCourt Kokua to follow a case after booking.

First Circuit Court and eCourt Kokua Searches

The First Circuit Court covers all of Oahu, and that includes every Mililani Mauka case. Felony cases are filed in Circuit Court. Misdemeanor, traffic, and small claim cases are filed in District Court. The eCourt Kokua portal is the free public window into both.

You can search by name, case number, or citation number. The search returns the case caption, charges, filing date, hearing dates, and final judgment. This data ties directly to the inmate population roster, since court hearings drive jail moves and release dates.

Hawaii State Judiciary eCourt Kokua Mililani Mauka inmate population

Some records stay sealed. Sealed cases include juvenile matters, some mental health cases, and items the judge has closed. You can still request limited info through a formal court request. The court clerk can tell you which form to use.

SAVIN/VINE Alerts for Mililani Mauka Cases

Hawaii's SAVIN service runs on the VINELink platform. It offers free custody notifications by phone, text, or email. Mililani Mauka residents can register as a victim, witness, or family member. When the tracked person moves, posts bail, or gets released, the system fires off an alert. Alerts run around the clock.

Sign-up takes a few minutes. You need a state ID number or the inmate's name and date of birth. The state never shares your contact info with the inmate.

SAVIN is run under HRS Chapter 353 and rules from the state attorney general. The service is free and voluntary. You can cancel alerts at any time.

Criminal History Checks Through HCJDC

The Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center (HCJDC) runs the state's criminal history system. Its records pull from court clerks, police booking sheets, and DCR. HCJDC offers name-based checks, fingerprint checks, and court record certifications. Mililani Mauka residents can order a check on themselves or on any named person.

A name-based check runs about $30. Fingerprint checks cost more and take longer. The longer wait is worth it for cases where the name is common. Fingerprints return a match or a clean result with high accuracy.

HCJDC also runs public access terminals on each island. You can walk in, search the state database, and print results. Staff will show you how to search but will not run queries for you. Rules for what is released track HRS § 92F-13.

Note: HCJDC reports show convictions and open charges. Non-conviction items like dismissals or acquittals often stay hidden in the public version.

UIPA Requests and Open Records

The Office of Information Practices (OIP) runs the state's open records program. The Uniform Information Practices Act (HRS Chapter 92F) lets you ask for most government records. This includes police reports, jail rosters, and inmate logs. Mililani Mauka residents can file a request with any state or county agency.

Fees are tied to search time and copy cost. Small requests are often free. Larger requests may run $20 to $100 or more. Ask for a fee estimate up front.

Some items are closed by law. These include juvenile records, medical files, and open investigations. Agencies may redact names of victims and witnesses before they release a file.

Sex Offender Registry for Mililani Mauka

Hawaii's public sex offender registry is run by HCJDC. It is free to search. You can search by name, address, or zip code. Mililani Mauka falls under zip code 96789, which covers the full Mililani area. The registry returns names, photos, and current addresses of offenders.

Registered offenders must keep their info current. The rule lives in HRS § 846E-02. New Oahu residents must register in person with the Hawaii State Sheriffs Division. Registration runs at the Kapolei Judiciary Complex on set days.

The registry is a public tool, not a police alert. Check it on a regular schedule for updates.

Reentry and Oversight for Mililani Mauka

State law sets clear rules for reentry. Inmates who return to Mililani Mauka often enroll in work furlough at OCCC. The program covers job search, housing, and family support. Furlough placement is set by HRS § 353L. The Hawaii Correctional System Oversight Commission reviews jail conditions and reentry results each year.

The Hawaii Correctional Industries unit offers job training inside the facilities. Training covers print shop work, furniture, and farm jobs. Skills learned inside often carry into paid work after release.

Commitment, classification, and transfer rules live in HRS § 353-11 and § 353-12. These rules set the path from arrest through final release.

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