Wailuku Police Blotter Database
The Wailuku Police Blotter is the arrest log kept by the Maui Police Department for the Maui County seat. MPD headquarters sits right in Wailuku at 55 Mahalani Street. The Records Section inside that building handles every public records request tied to the Wailuku Police Blotter. You can search by online portal, by fax, by mail, or by walking up to the counter. The town is also a state Public Access Site for HCJDC criminal history printouts.
Wailuku Overview
Maui Police Department Headquarters
The Maui Police Department main office is at 55 Mahalani Street, Wailuku, HI 96793. The main phone is (808) 244-6400. The fax for records is (808) 244-6411. The records section email is crs@mpd.net. The Records Section processes every UIPA request for the Wailuku Police Blotter and for the broader Maui County file. MPD also serves Molokai and Lanai from this central office.
In-person records requests are taken Monday through Thursday, 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. The Records Section is closed on Fridays, weekends, and state holidays. Bring a valid photo ID and a printed request. Mail and fax requests must include a phone number, an email address, and a valid copy of a photo ID. Fax records requests to (808) 244-6418.
The Second Circuit Court at Hoapili Hale, 2145 Main Street, Wailuku, handles Maui County trial and appeal dockets. A free eCourt Kokua public access terminal sits inside the courthouse. That terminal is a fast, no-cost way to tie a Wailuku Police Blotter line to a court case.
Search Wailuku Arrest Records
Arrest records in Maui County are public under the Uniform Information Practices Act, Hawaii Revised Statutes chapter 92F. Any record that ended in a conviction is open. A record that ended with no conviction or is still open is closed under HRS section 846-9. Juvenile records are closed. These state rules frame the Wailuku Police Blotter the same way they frame every other county log.
A full Maui County arrest record holds the arrest date, time, and place, the arresting agency, the charge, the report or offense number, race, age, sex, the full legal name, and warrant, bail, court, and custody data. MPD may redact personal contact data, medical data, and data tied to any open case.
The OIP portal above holds chapter 92F in full. Processing runs within 10 business days for a simple pull. A complex Wailuku Police Blotter request may take longer under UIPA rules. The Office of Information Practices at (808) 586-1400 is the appeal line if MPD denies a request.
Note: A Wailuku Police Blotter line tied to an open case may be held back; wait until the case closes to ask for the report copy.
Wailuku HCJDC Public Access Site
MPD headquarters at 55 Mahalani Street is a state HCJDC Public Access Site. Each printout costs $25. The site prints a Hawaii adult conviction record only. Call (808) 244-6345 or (808) 244-6355 to set a time. Only money orders and cashier's checks are taken at the window. If you cannot visit in person, the same data is on the state eCrim site.
The list above shows the six state Public Access Sites. Wailuku is the only site in Maui County. The site gives you a walk-in option for a Wailuku Police Blotter follow-up that runs on the same data set as eCrim. Printouts run same-day.
Wailuku UIPA Fees and Rules
MPD follows the state UIPA fee rate under Hawaii Administrative Rules section 2-71-19. Search time runs $2.50 per 15 minutes. Review and segregation run $5 per 15 minutes. The first $30 is waived on every request. If the request serves a public interest, the waiver jumps to the first $60. Personal records about yourself can often be pulled with no search fee.
Copy fees sit inside the state UIPA line. Other lawful costs include the real cost of a CD or videotape used to copy a record, plus actual postage. An arrest warrant does not expire on its own. It stays live until an officer serves it or the court cancels it. That means a Wailuku Police Blotter hit tied to an old warrant can still close a case years later.
The state eCrim fee runs $5 per name search and $12 per certified print. A first-time user verifies ID with a $1 charge on a valid credit card. An in-person or mail name check at the HCJDC runs $30. A fingerprint check runs $55 in person or $35 by mail. The HCJDC-073 form is the main check form.
State Systems for Wailuku Cases
The Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center at 465 S. King Street, Room 102, Honolulu, holds the adult conviction record for every Wailuku Police Blotter hit that led to a finding of guilt. The HCJDC window runs 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. Call (808) 587-3279 for the record line. Chapter 846 of the HRS sets the rules for the HCJDC.
The eCrim system is the online pull for the same data set. A name search runs $5. A certified print is $12. eCrim is open 24 hours a day and returns results right away.
The Hawaii Department of Public Safety runs the Maui Community Correctional Center at 600 Waiale Drive, Wailuku. MCCC holds pretrial detainees and sentenced misdemeanants from Maui, Molokai, and Lanai. An inmate search tool is linked from the DPS home page. A Wailuku Police Blotter hit that leads to a jail term can be traced to MCCC for short terms or to Oahu for longer state terms.
Maui County Crime Data
The Crime Prevention and Justice Assistance Division ships Maui County numbers to the FBI UCR file each year. In 2020, Maui County had a total index crime count of 2,294. The top types were larceny-theft, burglary, and motor vehicle theft. Total arrests ran 705 for the year. Those totals frame the Wailuku Police Blotter in context, since Wailuku is the county seat.
The CPJA office is at 235 S. Beretania Street, Suite 401, Honolulu, HI 96813. Call (808) 586-1150. CPJA runs the statewide UCR program and the NIBRS dashboard. The Crime in Hawaii annual report pulls the Maui County numbers together with the other three county totals.
Note: The state NIBRS dashboard lets you view Wailuku Police Blotter data at the county level, not the city level.
What a Wailuku Arrest Record Holds
A Wailuku Police Blotter entry starts with a booking at MPD. A full record holds the arrest date, time, and place, the arresting agency, the charge, the report or offense number, race, age, sex, and the full legal name. The record also holds warrant data, bail data, court data, and custody status. MPD may redact personal contact data, medical data, and data tied to any open case.
In Maui County, a person arrested for a misdemeanor is taken to the jail or let out on bail with a court date set. The arrest, detention, indictment, formal charge, and any ruling are on the record. The Wailuku Police Blotter is how the public first sees the date and the charge of that first step.
Nearby Maui Cities
Wailuku is the Maui County seat. Nearby Maui cities file through the same MPD Records Section.
Full county data sits on the Maui County page.


