Ahuimanu People Search

An Ahuimanu people search runs through HPD District 4 in Kaneohe, the Windward District Court, and Honolulu's real property offices. Ahuimanu sits in the Kahaluu area on the Windward side of Oahu. The town is small and mostly residential. Record work for Ahuimanu folds into the Honolulu County system. You can pull court files, arrest logs, deeds, and vital records with the same tools used across Oahu.

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Ahuimanu Overview

Honolulu County
District 4 HPD Area
Windward Region
96744 ZIP Code

HPD District 4 covers Ahuimanu from the Kaneohe substation, phone (808) 723-8640. The area runs from Kailua up to Kualoa. Records are held at HPD headquarters at 801 South Beretania Street, Honolulu. Walk-in requests at the substation are not filled. All copies come from the Alapai Records Division.

Start at the main HPD request page. Use honolulupd.org/police-reports for the form.

HPD records page for an Ahuimanu people search

Copy fees are $0.50 for the first page and $0.25 for each extra page. Color prints run $0.65 per page. Under HRS § 92F-13, juvenile info and home contact data are pulled out of public copies. Email: recordsrequest@honolulupd.org.

Daily arrests post on the HPD log at honolulupd.org/information/arrest-logs. Log data shows name, age, charge, and booking time. The log holds 14 days of data. Older bookings need a formal records ask.

Ahuimanu People Search Court Records

Ahuimanu residents use the First Circuit Court. Felony and big civil work goes to Punchbowl in Honolulu. Day-to-day traffic, small claims, and landlord cases head to the Kaneohe District Court, also called Windward District Court. The state keeps case files online at eCourt Kokua for cases since August 2012.

Note: Windward District Court cases before August 2012 are not in eCourt Kokua. Older Ahuimanu files take an in-person ask at Kaneohe.

Ahuimanu People Search by Property

Ahuimanu is mostly single-family housing on the slopes above Kahekili Highway. A people search tied to a parcel in Ahuimanu uses qPublic. Name, street, and TMK lookups all work.

qPublic is the full Honolulu search tool. Go to qpublic.schneidercorp.com.

Honolulu qPublic page for an Ahuimanu people search

Output lists owner names, TMK, land area, and ten years of tax data. Sale price and sale date come through as well. Data updates yearly on December 15. Owner edits post on any day.

Tax bills go through realpropertyhonolulu.com. Deed filings for Hawaii are held at the Bureau of Conveyances at boc.ehawaii.gov. HRS Chapter 502 sets recording rules. A county-level view is at realpropertyhonolulu.com.

Ahuimanu Vital Records

Birth, death, marriage, and civil union files for Ahuimanu are held by the Hawaii DOH. The Oahu window is at 1250 Punchbowl Street, Room 103, Honolulu. Phone (808) 586-4541. Windward residents cut travel by mailing in a request.

The DOH vital records page has the forms. Visit health.hawaii.gov/vitalrecords.

Hawaii DOH vital records page for an Ahuimanu people search

HRS § 338-18 sets the rules for a certified copy. Only a named party, close kin, or a legal agent may ask. A mail order runs 4 to 6 weeks. Walk-ins for marriage copies are often same-day.

Other Ahuimanu People Search Tools

Adult convictions come from eCrim at HCJDC. A name search is $5. A certified report is $12. See ag.hawaii.gov/hcjdc. HRS Chapter 846 holds the rules.

The covered offender list is at sexoffenders.ehawaii.gov under HRS Chapter 846E. The page takes name, city, and ZIP searches. Hawaii SAVIN for inmate checks is at hawaiipolice.gov/services/inmate-information.

UIPA asks (HRS Chapter 92F) go through oip.hawaii.gov. Full law text is at law.hawaii.gov. HRS Chapter 803 covers wiretap rules. City Clerk voter work is at oip.hawaii.gov/entity/office-of-the-city-clerk.

An Ahuimanu people search often pulls from HPD District 4, Kaneohe District Court, RPAD parcel files, and HCJDC conviction data.

Ahuimanu People Search Local Help

Windward residents who need help with a records ask can use a few free tools. Legal Aid Society of Hawaii has a Windward intake line at (808) 536-4302. Volunteer Legal Services Hawaii also runs a help line for basic civil work.

The Office of the City Clerk at 530 S. King Street, (808) 768-3810, holds voter files for Ahuimanu. A form of ask in writing is best. The office falls under UIPA, Chapter 92F. Council meeting minutes are free and online.

Main Ahuimanu contact points:

  • HPD District 4 (Kaneohe): (808) 723-8640
  • First Circuit Court, Punchbowl: (808) 539-4767
  • DOH Vital Records: (808) 586-4541
  • HCJDC eCrim: (808) 587-3100
  • City Clerk: (808) 768-3810

Open records asks under UIPA get a first reply in 10 business days. A search fee may apply if the ask is big. The OIP hotline at (808) 586-1400 helps walk a person through a tough file. HRS Chapter 803 wiretap rules do not change the UIPA rights of a person tied to a state file.

The Kaneohe District Court hears small claims, traffic, and landlord cases for Ahuimanu. The site is at 45-939 Pookela Street, Kaneohe. Court hours run Monday to Friday. A walk-in clerk pull for an older file is best in the morning. Most staff can point a person to the right form. Cash, card, and check are all fine at the cashier.

Ahuimanu People Search UIPA Request Steps

The Uniform Information Practices Act sets the rules for a public file ask in Hawaii. HRS Chapter 92F is the core law. Any Ahuimanu resident may file an open records ask. The target can be a state board, a county office, or a school. A named person does not have to give a reason. But a clear ask helps staff pull the right file fast.

Use plain words. Cite the agency, the date range, and the file type. Mail or email both work. A first class letter is fine. An online form is faster. The Office of Information Practices helps with tough files. Visit oip.hawaii.gov for the model request form. The OIP sits at 250 South Hotel Street, Suite 107, Honolulu. Phone (808) 586-1400. Staff can walk a person through a file that is held up or held back.

Fees run $0.25 per page for copies. Search time runs $2.50 per 15 minutes after the first free hour. Agencies must reply in 10 business days. A reply can be the file, a partial file, or a denial with cause. A denial tied to HRS § 92F-13 points to a named ground. Juvenile, medical, and home contact data often get held back. The rest of the file should come through.

Common Ahuimanu UIPA targets:

  • HPD records for an arrest or a case file
  • DOH data on a state health program
  • Kaneohe District Court file older than eCourt coverage
  • RPAD assessment notes tied to a parcel
  • City Council meeting records

Keep a copy of the ask and the date sent. If an agency misses the 10-day mark, the next step is a note to OIP. OIP can open a review. The review is free. Most files come out faster once OIP makes a call. An appeal to state court is the last step. Most asks do not need that.

For Ahuimanu folks, most asks go to an Oahu-based office. The mail drop can be the OIP address or the agency's own window. Keep the ask short and clear. A file number or a case number speeds up a pull. Staff can bill the $0.25 page fee up front if the file is large. Ask for a cost quote before a full pull on a big file.

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