Search Wahiawa Inmate Population

Wahiawa sits on Oahu's central plateau, and the Wahiawa inmate population moves through several state and county systems. Adults arrested here are booked by the Honolulu Police Department at the District 2 Wahiawa station. Most land at OCCC for pretrial hold. Court cases run through the First Circuit at the Wahiawa District Court or downtown. This page shows how to find a current inmate, pull a court record, or request a state criminal history check.

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Wahiawa Overview

~17,800 Population
Honolulu County
First Circuit Court Circuit
OCCC Primary Facility

Wahiawa Inmate Population and OCCC Custody

Wahiawa has no jail inside city limits. After arrest, adults move to the Oahu Community Correctional Center. OCCC sits at 2199 Kamehameha Highway, Honolulu, HI 96819. The main line is (808) 832-1700. Staff run intake 24 hours a day. Each new inmate shows up on the state custody roster soon after booking.

State custody rules run under HRS Chapter 353. The chapter covers intake, housing, and transfer. Most Wahiawa cases stay at OCCC through first appearance and bail review. Sentenced men may move to Halawa or Waiawa. Women move to WCCC in Kailua. Check the OCCC facility page for visit hours and dress rules.

Call before any visit. Housing can change on short notice. Some pods have lockdowns. Transport to court runs on set days.

HPD District 2 Wahiawa Station and Arrest Logs

The HPD District 2 station covers Wahiawa, Mililani, Schofield Barracks, Whitmore Village, and the North Shore. The station sits at 330 North Cane Street. Patrol officers book local arrests here before the transfer to OCCC. Call (808) 723-8655 for the main desk.

HPD keeps a rolling arrest log at each station. The log covers the last 14 days. You can view it during business hours. It is a paper binder. It lists name, date of birth, arrest date, charge, and booking number.

The log does not show court outcomes. It does not show mug shots. Use eCourt Kokua for case status. HPD also sells report copies at $3 each from the Records Division in downtown Honolulu. Get the report number at booking if you can.

Note: The District 2 station log rolls off after 14 days. Older arrests may still appear on eCourt Kokua if a case was filed.

First Circuit Court Records for the Wahiawa Inmate Population

Wahiawa District Court at 1302 California Avenue hears traffic, small claims, and most misdemeanor cases. Felony cases move to the First Circuit Court downtown. The free eCourt Kokua portal lets you search both by name, case number, or citation. It is free and open to the public.

Each result shows the caption, charges, hearing dates, bail, and judgment. Release orders also show. This data lines up with the OCCC inmate population roster. Juvenile matters stay closed under HRS § 571-84. Sealed files do not show at all.

The Wahiawa District Court clerk sells certified copies for a small fee. Walk-in hours run weekdays. Bring a photo ID and the case number. The terminal is free. Staff will not run a search for you.

SAVIN and VINELink Alerts in Wahiawa

Hawaii's victim alert service runs on the VINELink site. The service is free. Wahiawa residents can register as a victim, witness, or family member. Alerts fire by phone, text, or email when an inmate moves, posts bail, or gets released.

Sign-up takes a few minutes. You need the inmate name and date of birth. The state keeps your info private. Alerts run around the clock. Cancel any time.

SAVIN covers every DCR facility. A Wahiawa case stays in the alert pool through every move. Works on desktop or phone. Save the link in your browser.

HCJDC Criminal History Checks for Wahiawa Inmate Population

The Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center runs state record checks. The HCJDC page lists steps, fees, and wait time. Name checks cost about $30. Fingerprint checks cost more and take longer. Both pull from court, police, and corrections data.

Rules follow HRS § 92F-13 and HRS § 92F-12. Convictions are public. Non-conviction items stay closed under HRS § 846-9. Arrests without a guilty finding often do not show on a public check.

HCJDC runs public access terminals on Oahu. Walk in, search the state database, and print results. Bring a valid photo ID. Staff will show you how, but they will not run queries for you.

DCR Oversight and Wahiawa Inmate Population Data

The Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation runs each state jail and prison. The DCR site lists every facility, phone, and visit rule. OCCC holds Wahiawa pretrial inmates. Halawa and Waiawa hold sentenced men. WCCC holds women.

DCR posts weekly population counts by facility. The counts show bed use at each site. Families use the reports to plan visits. Call before you drive down.

Work furlough runs from OCCC under HRS § 353L. A clean record inside earns a furlough spot. The program helps with reentry to Wahiawa and central Oahu.

UIPA Requests in Wahiawa

The Uniform Information Practices Act (HRS Chapter 92F) opens most state and county records. Wahiawa residents can file UIPA requests with any agency. Write a short letter or email. Name the record, date range, and agency. Keep a copy.

Agencies must reply in set time limits. Simple requests get a reply in 10 business days. Complex ones run longer. Small requests are free. Large ones have a search and copy fee.

Closed items include juvenile records, medical files, and open cases. Agencies may redact victim or witness names. The Office of Information Practices hears appeals.

Sex Offender Registry and Expungement for Wahiawa

Hawaii runs a public sex offender registry under HRS § 846E-02. The site is free. Wahiawa falls under zip code 96786. Search by name, address, or zip code. The results show name, photo, offense, and home address.

Expungement runs under HRS § 831-3.2. Only non-conviction arrests qualify. File the form with HCJDC. The process can take weeks. After expungement, the arrest does not show on a public check.

Juvenile files seal at age 18 under HRS § 571-84. Sealed files do not show on background checks. Ask the clerk for help if you are not sure of your status.

New Oahu residents with a duty to register must visit the Hawaii State Sheriffs Division at the Kapolei Judiciary Complex. Register by appointment.

Nearby Cities and Wahiawa Inmate Population Links

Wahiawa shares HPD District 2 with other central Oahu towns. For more info on nearby areas, see the Mililani Town, Mililani Mauka, and Schofield Barracks pages. All three use OCCC for adult intake. For countywide info, see the Honolulu County page.

Federal cases from Wahiawa touch the Federal Detention Center in Honolulu. Military cases from Schofield may go through Army channels. Most civilian custody questions end at OCCC or Halawa. Start there.

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