Search Mililani Mauka DUI Records
DUI records for Mililani Mauka are split across three separate agencies: the Honolulu Police Department handles arrest reports, the Wahiawa District Court holds traffic case files and traffic abstracts, and the Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center maintains statewide conviction records. Mililani Mauka sits in Honolulu County and falls under the First Circuit Court system. This guide explains where to go, what each record costs, and what to expect from each source.
Mililani Mauka Overview
HPD District 2: Arrest Reports for Mililani Mauka DUI Cases
Mililani Mauka is served by Honolulu Police Department District 2, which covers the Wahiawa and Waialua areas of central and north Oahu. When an OVUII arrest takes place in Mililani Mauka, the responding officers are from District 2. The arrest report generated by that arrest is filed through HPD and can be requested from the HPD Records Division in downtown Honolulu. District 2 does not process records requests directly. All report requests go through the central records office.
The HPD Records Division is at 801 South Beretania Street, Honolulu. It is open Monday through Friday from 7:45 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. The office is closed on weekends and state holidays. You can submit a request in person or by mail. There is no way to request a police report online through HPD. When you contact them, have the report number or the date, time, and location of the incident ready. Without that information, the search takes longer and may not produce results.
| Office | HPD Records Division |
|---|---|
| Address | 801 South Beretania Street, Honolulu, HI 96813 |
| Phone | (808) 723-3258 |
| hpdrecords@honolulu.gov | |
| Hours | Monday-Friday, 7:45 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. |
| HPD District 2 | (808) 723-8700 |
Report copies cost $0.50 for the first page and $0.25 for each page after that. Colored copies run $0.65 per page. Payment is accepted by cash, check, or cashier's check made out to the City and County of Honolulu. Credit cards are not accepted. Hawaii Revised Statutes Chapter 92F governs public record access in Hawaii, and personal details like Social Security numbers and dates of birth are redacted before any report is released. Full reports are only available once a case is closed.
HPD does not provide court records, traffic abstracts, or criminal history reports. Those documents come from the Wahiawa District Court and the Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center. See those sections below for details. For DUI crashes that resulted in a collision, motor vehicle accident reports can also be requested through the HPD Records Division at the same phone number.
The HPD police reports page outlines the full process for requesting arrest reports tied to DUI and OVUII incidents in Mililani Mauka.
Review the HPD records page before you submit your request so you know what details to include and what the process looks like.
Wahiawa District Court and Traffic Violations Bureau
DUI and OVUII cases for Mililani Mauka are filed at the Wahiawa District Court, which is part of the First Circuit. The courthouse is located at 1034 Kilani Avenue in Wahiawa, about two miles from Mililani Mauka. This is the venue for traffic court hearings and is also home to the Wahiawa Division of the Traffic Violations Bureau. If you need to look up a case, pay a citation, or request a traffic abstract tied to a Mililani Mauka DUI arrest, this is the right location. In-person services run from 8:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, on a first come, first served basis.
| Court | Wahiawa District Court |
|---|---|
| Address | 1034 Kilani Avenue, Wahiawa, HI 96786 |
| Phone | (808) 534-6200 |
| Traffic Violations Bureau | (808) 534-6200 (Wahiawa Division) |
| Hours | Monday-Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. |
Traffic abstracts are the most commonly requested document for DUI record searches. An abstract shows all alleged moving violations and any convictions, including OVUII, along with any administrative license revocations. It does not include parking or equipment citations. The fee is $20 per abstract. You can request one by mail or in person at the TVB.
For mail requests, send a self-addressed stamped envelope, a money order or cashier's check for $20 made payable to District Court, and the subject's full legal name, date of birth, and driver's license number. Personal checks are not accepted for abstract requests. You can also pick one up in person at the Wahiawa courthouse window during business hours. Processing times for mail requests can vary. In-person requests are typically handled the same day if you arrive before 1:00 p.m.
The Hawaii State Judiciary traffic abstracts page lists fees, mailing addresses, and instructions for all district court locations in Hawaii, including the Wahiawa Division that serves Mililani Mauka.
Check the abstracts page before you mail your request to confirm the current fee and the correct mailing address for the Wahiawa Division.
Traffic case records can also be searched for free online through eCourt Kokua at the Hawaii State Judiciary traffic case records page. The system covers all district courts in Hawaii, including Wahiawa. You can look up case status, hearing dates, and basic charge information without paying anything. The data in eCourt Kokua is not a certified copy, but it is useful for confirming whether a case was filed and what happened with it.
Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center: Conviction Records
The Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center (HCJDC) is the official statewide source for criminal conviction records. If you need to find out whether someone has a DUI or OVUII conviction in Hawaii, a search through the HCJDC is the right step. The center only shows adult conviction data. Arrests that did not lead to a conviction and pending cases are not available to the general public through this source.
The HCJDC is located at 465 South King Street, Room 102, Honolulu, HI 96813. The main phone number is (808) 587-3100. The Criminal History Record Checks Unit can be reached at (808) 587-3279. The online eCrim portal at ecrim.ehawaii.gov lets you search by name, date of birth, Social Security number, and gender. Each name-based search costs $5.00. If you want an official printed report with the full results, that costs $12. Both the search and the report must be completed in one session. Logging out or going idle for more than 30 minutes will end the session and you will have to start over and pay again.
In-person requests are also accepted at the HCJDC office during business hours. Fingerprint-based background checks are available for more thorough searches, though they take longer to process. For most Mililani Mauka DUI record searches, the name-based eCrim search will be enough to confirm whether a conviction exists.
The HCJDC does not show arrests, pending charges, or cases that were dismissed. It reflects only what was formally adjudicated as a conviction. If the case is still in court, you would need to check eCourt Kokua or contact the Wahiawa District Court directly for current case status.
OVUII Law and DUI Penalties in Hawaii
Hawaii does not use the term DUI in its statutes. The offense is called Operating a Vehicle Under the Influence of an Intoxicant, or OVUII, defined under Hawaii Revised Statutes Section 291E-61. A person commits OVUII when they operate or assume physical control of a vehicle while impaired by alcohol or drugs, or while having a blood alcohol concentration of .08 grams or more per 100 milliliters of blood, or .08 grams or more per 210 liters of breath.
First-offense OVUII penalties are mandatory and cannot be suspended or deferred by a judge. They include completion of a 14-hour substance abuse rehabilitation program, license revocation for one to eighteen months, installation of an ignition interlock device during the revocation period, and one of the following: 72 hours of community service work, between 48 hours and 5 days in jail, or a fine of $250 to $1,000. Courts can order any combination of those options based on the facts of the case.
A second OVUII conviction within ten years carries at least 30 days in jail, 240 hours of community service, a fine of $500 to $1,500, and a two-year license suspension. A third offense or more within ten years becomes a Class C Felony under Section 291E-61.5, which is called Habitual OVUII. That charge carries up to five years in prison, license revocation of one to five years, vehicle forfeiture, and mandatory substance abuse treatment. Mililani Mauka OVUII cases are prosecuted by the City and County of Honolulu Department of the Prosecuting Attorney.
In fiscal year 2022-2023, the First Circuit Court finalized 1,711 misdemeanor DUI cases. Of those, 989 resulted in convictions, a rate of 57%. That figure is lower than other Hawaii counties. Maui County had a conviction rate of 87% during the same period, and Hawaii island was at 69%.
Administrative Driver's License Revocation: ADLRO
An OVUII arrest in Mililani Mauka triggers two separate proceedings at the same time. The criminal case goes through the Wahiawa District Court. The administrative license case goes to the Administrative Driver's License Revocation Office, known as ADLRO. These two processes are independent. A driver can lose their license through ADLRO even if the criminal case is dismissed.
ADLRO has 8 days from the arrest date to decide whether to revoke a driver's license. If it decides to revoke, that decision is mailed to the address the driver gave to police at the time of arrest. The revocation can take effect as soon as 30 days from the arrest. Drivers have the right to request a formal hearing before the revocation starts. If no hearing is requested in time, the revocation proceeds automatically.
ADLRO also issues ignition interlock permits and employee driver's permits to qualified drivers who are under revocation and still need to drive to work. The ADLRO can be reached at (808) 534-6800. Filings can be sent by email to respondents.ADLRO@courts.hawaii.gov in PDF, JPG, JPEG, or PNG format.
The ADLRO page on the Hawaii State Judiciary website has information on the revocation timeline, how to request a hearing, and how to apply for a limited-use permit while a revocation is in effect for Mililani Mauka residents.
Nearby Cities in Honolulu County
All cities listed above are in Honolulu County and are served by the First Circuit Court and the Honolulu Police Department.