Makakilo Booking Reports Lookup
Makakilo booking reports cover arrests made in this Ewa-side community on Oahu. The Honolulu Police Department works the area through its District 8 base in Kapolei. HPD posts a fresh PDF arrest log each day, and a live print copy stays at Central Receiving in town. Use this page to find Makakilo booking reports fast, track a case through the court portal, or call the right district station. The first stop is the daily HPD log. The next step is the state eCourt Kokua site for the court case tied to each Makakilo booking report.
Makakilo Quick Facts
Makakilo Booking Reports and HPD District 8
Makakilo sits in HPD District 8. The main base for the district is the Kapolei Police Station at 1100 Kamokila Boulevard, Kapolei, HI 96707. The main line is (808) 723-8400. Patrol officers from this station cover Makakilo, Kapolei, Ewa Beach, Ocean Pointe, and Waianae. All adult arrests in Makakilo end up in the HPD daily log, which is a PDF file posted on the department site. The desk at Alapai keeps a live print version 24 hours a day.
The district does not run a walk-in records office of its own. For a report copy, you still send the ask to the Honolulu Police Department Records and Identification Division at Alapai, 801 South Beretania Street, (808) 723-3258. Hours there are Monday to Friday, 7:45 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. For status on a served TRO, the local number to check is the one for the district where the respondent lives. For most Makakilo cases that is District 8 in Kapolei.
Lead-in to the HPD page. The image shows the Honolulu Police Department home page, the main launch point for Makakilo booking reports.
HPD links to daily logs, police report forms, and district contact info. Start at honolulupd.org to open a Makakilo booking report search.
Note: HPD will not run name searches by phone. You have to read the log or send a written request.
Daily Arrest Logs for Makakilo
The adult arrest log is the core source for Makakilo booking reports. Each PDF shows the date and time of the arrest, the name, the age, the sex, the race, the charge, the arresting officer, and a report number. The log stays live on the HPD site for 14 days. After that, it is pulled. For older logs, send a written ask to Records.
Juvenile info is held out of the log. State rules keep juvenile files sealed. Under HRS §92F-13, some parts of the log may be redacted, such as home address or Social Security numbers. The rest is open to the public. You can read the log on your phone or a home computer. No login is needed. The file opens as a plain PDF.
To find the daily arrest log, go to the HPD site and click the Information tab. The logs are sorted by date. The Recent Highlights page has a 72-hour view of reported crime by area. Makakilo may appear as "Ewa" or "Kapolei" on the highlights feed. A name on the log is not a finding of guilt. It only shows that the person was booked.
Lead-in to the state booking log view. The image below shows the Hawaii statewide booking log page, which sets the tone for how island police share arrest data.
Hawaii County runs a similar daily booking log. The state-side example shows the format used in the islands.
OCCC Custody for Makakilo Arrests
After a Makakilo arrest, most adults are taken to Central Receiving. From there, they may be moved to the Oahu Community Correctional Center, or OCCC, at 2199 Kamehameha Highway, Honolulu. The main line is (808) 832-1777. The visit line is (808) 832-1633. Visits run 8 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., except on holidays. OCCC has roughly 950 beds. Women may be held at OCCC first, then moved to the Women's Community Correctional Center at 42-477 Kalanianaole Highway, Kailua, (808) 266-9675.
Lead-in to the OCCC profile page. The image shows the jail's entry on the state Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation site.
OCCC is the next step after most Makakilo booking reports. Check dcr.hawaii.gov for visit rules or call the visit line for a status update.
An arrest log does not show if a person is still at OCCC. The log captures only the booking, not the release. For live custody status, use the free Hawaii SAVIN tool. It runs 24 hours a day. You can sign up for phone or email alerts on a release, a transfer, or a court date. The service is run by VINE and is free to the public.
Makakilo Booking Reports in Court
Most felony cases tied to a Makakilo booking report land in the First Circuit Court at 777 Punchbowl Street, Honolulu, HI 96813, (808) 539-4300. Low-level crimes and traffic cases go through District Court at 1111 Alakea Street, (808) 538-5149. Family matters such as TROs or juvenile filings are heard at Family Court in Kapolei, (808) 954-8310. That Kapolei site is also near Makakilo, and it often handles matters tied to Ewa-side booking reports.
Live case info is on eCourt Kokua, the state Judiciary's public search portal. It covers traffic, District Court, Circuit Court, Family Court, Land Court, Tax Appeal, and appellate cases. Fees run $3 for a 1 to 30 page view, 10 cents each added page, plus $2 for a cert. A yearly pass is $500 for unlimited use. Under HRS §92F-11, the state treats most court data as open to the public.
Lead-in to eCourt Kokua. The image shows the main search page of the Judiciary's public records portal.
The portal shows each court step, from first charge to sentence. Visit eCourt Kokua to pull up a Makakilo booking report case.
State Criminal History Checks
The Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center, or HCJDC, runs the state criminal history check. It is part of the Department of the Attorney General. The fast path is the online eCrim portal. A single search runs $5. A full report runs $12. You need the full name and date of birth. The tool pulls adult arrest and court data statewide. It does not cover juvenile files.
For a walk-in look, HCJDC runs a Public Access site at HPD, 801 South Beretania Street. The fee is $25 per printout. You need a photo ID. A similar site is on other islands, but Honolulu County runs the main one.
The data center home page gives the full scope of state tools. Learn more at ag.hawaii.gov/hcjdc. The site also covers firearm checks, fingerprint submissions, and statutory rap sheet rules.
How to Get Makakilo Booking Reports
For a paper copy of a Makakilo booking report, the Records and Identification Division at Alapai is the office that fills the order. You can ask by mail, by email, or in person. The desk is open Monday to Friday, 7:45 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fees run $0.50 for the first page, $0.25 per added page. A verification letter costs $1 for the first page. Color copies are $0.65 per page.
Put in the request the full name of the person arrested, the date and place, any report number, and your contact info. If you want a report on someone else, give a clear reason. HPD will redact names, home addresses, phone numbers, dates of birth, and Social Security numbers, per HRS §92F-13. You may get the rest. See the police reports page for the email form and mail steps.
Lead-in to the HPD police reports page. The image shows the HPD forms and fee lists for Makakilo booking report copies.
Full forms, email, and mail addresses live on the HPD police reports page.
Nearby Oahu Cities
Makakilo is part of Honolulu County, which covers all of Oahu. Booking reports flow through HPD no matter which town the arrest happens in. The cities close to Makakilo all share the Kapolei district base for patrol. Use the links below to see the booking report page for each.