Search Halawa People Records

A Halawa people search pulls data from HPD District 3, the First Circuit Court, the Oahu Community Correctional Center, and Honolulu's Real Property office. Halawa sits in the Pearl Harbor basin near Aloha Stadium. The town is best known as the home of OCCC, the main jail for Oahu. Most records work for Halawa lines up with the rest of Honolulu County, with OCCC as a key stop for inmate checks.

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Halawa Overview

Honolulu County
District 3 HPD Area
OCCC Main Jail
1st Judicial Circuit

Police calls in Halawa are worked by HPD District 3 based in Pearl City, phone (808) 723-8800. Records are held at HPD headquarters at 801 South Beretania Street in Honolulu. A Halawa people search for a crash, a theft, or a case file runs through the Records Division. Substation staff take walk-ins but do not hand out copies.

Start at the main HPD records page. Use honolulupd.org/police-reports to get the form.

HPD records page for a Halawa people search

Page fees run $0.50 for page one and $0.25 for each extra sheet. Color copies are $0.65. Juvenile pages are pulled from the file under HRS § 92F-13. Email: recordsrequest@honolulupd.org.

Adult arrests in Halawa post to the HPD arrest log. See honolulupd.org/information/arrest-logs. The page shows name, age, charge, and booking time. Data rotates out after 14 days. Federal bookings and stadium-event arrests by other units are not on the log.

Halawa People Search Inmate Lookup

The Oahu Community Correctional Center (OCCC) is at 2199 Kamehameha Highway, Honolulu, HI 96819. The site is in the Halawa district. Phone (808) 832-1777. OCCC is the main holding and pretrial jail for Oahu. A Halawa people search for an inmate, a bail status, or a court date often lands here.

Use Hawaii SAVIN for free status checks. The site at hawaiipolice.gov/services/inmate-information lets you sign up for email or phone alerts.

Hawaii SAVIN page for a Halawa people search

SAVIN data is tied into the Department of Public Safety feed. Alerts fire on release, transfer, or escape. The tool is anonymous. Your phone or email is not shared with the inmate.

For the nearby Halawa Correctional Facility (state prison at 99-902 Moanalua Road), inmate mail and visit info goes through the Hawaii Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. The state hub at law.hawaii.gov lists policy text under HRS Chapter 353.

First Circuit Court Cases

Halawa cases are heard in the First Circuit. The main site is Ka`ahumanu Hale, 777 Punchbowl Street, Honolulu, (808) 539-4767. Family law goes to Kapolei, 4675 Kapolei Parkway, (808) 954-8000. OCCC inmates make court trips from Halawa to Punchbowl for hearings.

Note: Bail paperwork for OCCC inmates can be cleared at the Punchbowl courthouse cashier during court hours. Bring case number and ID.

Halawa People Search by Property

Halawa has mixed-use parcels, light industry near the stadium, and dense housing mauka of the freeway. A Halawa people search tied to a parcel uses the RPAD tools. qPublic lets you search by name, TMK, or street.

qPublic takes most name and street queries. See qpublic.schneidercorp.com.

Honolulu qPublic page for a Halawa people search

The grid shows parcel number, legal info, land area, owner names, and ten years of value history. Data is updated yearly on December 15. For the tax bill side, go to realpropertyhonolulu.com.

Deeds and liens for the state are held by the Bureau of Conveyances. The portal at boc.ehawaii.gov covers all Hawaii parcels. HRS Chapter 502 sets the recording rules. A county-level records index is at realpropertyhonolulu.com.

Halawa Vital Records

Birth, death, marriage, and civil union files for Halawa go through the Hawaii DOH. The Oahu window is at 1250 Punchbowl Street, Room 103. Phone (808) 586-4541. Hours are Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 7:45 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.

The DOH vital records page is the main gate. Visit health.hawaii.gov/vitalrecords.

Hawaii DOH vital records page for a Halawa people search

HRS § 338-18 sets who can pull a certified copy. Only a named party, close kin, or a legal agent. Mail orders need a printed form, a state-ID copy, and proof of tie. Same-day pick-up is often done for a marriage record at the Oahu window.

More Halawa People Search Tools

Adult conviction checks run through eCrim at HCJDC. A name search is $5. A certified report is $12. See ag.hawaii.gov/hcjdc. HRS Chapter 846 sets the data rules.

The state covered offender list is at sexoffenders.ehawaii.gov under HRS Chapter 846E. The search works by name or ZIP. A map view is held as well.

For open records asks under UIPA (HRS Chapter 92F), see oip.hawaii.gov. State wiretap rules sit in HRS Chapter 803. Law text is at law.hawaii.gov. City Clerk voter data goes through oip.hawaii.gov/entity/office-of-the-city-clerk.

Halawa people search work often blends OCCC inmate data, HPD District 3 reports, First Circuit Court cases, and RPAD parcel data.

Older Halawa Records and Genealogy

Some Halawa people search work needs older files. Vital data from long ago is held by the Hawaii State Archives and by the State Library. Staff help for free. Print copies run a small fee per page.

The State Archives holds birth files from 1842 and death files from 1859. Marriage files go back to 1826 for some islands. Microfilm runs from 1896 to 1919 and is open for self-serve view. The Archives is at 364 South King Street in Honolulu, right by Iolani Palace. Open hours are Monday to Friday, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

For digital look-ups, the FamilySearch wiki page at familysearch.org/en/wiki/Hawaii_Vital_Records is a good base. It has free links to old census rolls, ship lists, and Halawa plantation files. A user account is free. The site pulls from the LDS film index.

The Ulukau Hawaiian Electronic Library is the main tool for names in the Hawaiian script. Old news, lease maps, and land grants can all show the name of a Halawa family. The text search is free. Some files are in English. Some sit in Hawaiian with side-by-side keys.

HRS Chapter 338 locks down new vital files. Older files have fewer blocks. A death record over 75 years old is often open. A birth file over 100 years old is held as open as well. That rule makes Halawa family tree work much less tied up in red tape.

Note: For adopted or sealed birth files, even old ones, a court order under HRS Chapter 92F may be needed. That step runs through the First Circuit Family Court in Kapolei.

Old Halawa plantation files are a deep well of data. Names of field hands, lease maps, and pay sheets can all hint at a living kin line. The Bishop Museum archives in nearby Kalihi hold much of this paper. A call ahead to the research desk helps, as some boxes need a day to pull. The Museum charges no fee for on-site use. Scans cost a set page rate.

Another free tool is the U.S. Federal Census. Halawa hits show up in the 1900, 1910, 1920, 1930, and 1940 counts. The 1950 census came out in 2022. Name, age, job, and street are all on the sheet. Use FamilySearch or the National Archives site to grab a clean scan at no cost.

For land-tied genealogy, the Waihona Aina land grant index helps. It lists the Kuleana Act claims filed in the 1850s. Many Halawa-side lots are in that set. The data is key for a kin search tied to land title.

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