Schofield Barracks Busted Mugshots Database
Schofield Barracks busted mugshots tie to a US Army post in central Oahu. This is a federal installation, so law enforcement works a bit different here. Army Military Police cover the base. HPD's Wahiawa District Station handles coordination for off-base and civilian matters. Military personnel are subject to the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Civilian arrests on base may go through the MP or get handed off to HPD. State and federal records may both apply to a single case. You can search for some files through the standard state tools and others through federal paths.
Schofield Barracks Overview
Military Police and Schofield Barracks Busted Mugshots
Army Military Police run day-to-day law enforcement on Schofield Barracks. The MPs respond to calls on base, make arrests, and keep the booking logs. Federal jurisdiction covers the full installation. For a military member, a case moves through the chain of command and may end in a court-martial under the UCMJ. For a civilian arrested on base, the case may be turned over to HPD or the US Attorney for the District of Hawaii. Records on those cases may live in more than one place.
The installation provost marshal keeps the main law enforcement files. Access to those records is set by the US Army and federal law. A member of the public may file a Freedom of Information Act request with the Army. That goes through the Department of the Army FOIA office. State records law does not apply on base. If a case is worked jointly with HPD, parts of it may also show in state files.
HPD Wahiawa District Station sits just outside the base. The station coordinates with MPs on cases that cross the line between base and town. You can learn more at the HPD site at honolulupd.org. The site has records forms, district maps, and the main HPD phone. HPD charges $5 for the first page of a report and $0.25 for each added page.
HPD Wahiawa works with Schofield Barracks MPs on joint calls and hand-offs. Many civilian cases tied to base calls end up in HPD files.
Hawaii State Search for Schofield Cases
For state-level criminal history, the same tools work. The Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center runs the state's main system. Visit ag.hawaii.gov/hcjdc. A name-based check is $30. A fingerprint-based check is $55 for the first and $35 for each later one. Online, eCrim at ecrim.ehawaii.gov runs a search for $5 and a full report for $12.
Not every arrest at Schofield Barracks will show in eCrim. If the case was worked fully by the Army and stayed federal, it will not be in the state system. If HPD took over or if the case was filed in state court, it will show. This can make record searches for Schofield cases a bit more work. You may need to check both state and federal tools. The federal path starts with the US District Court for Hawaii and the PACER system.
The HCJDC portal handles state-level searches. For Schofield cases, some records may also be in federal systems and need a separate check.
Note: Military court-martial records are held by the Army Judicial Branch. Civilian access to these files is limited. Some are public, some are not. Each one is case by case.
First Circuit Court for Civilian Schofield Cases
When a civilian case from Schofield Barracks goes to state court, it lands in the First Circuit Court. You can look up cases on eCourt Kokua. Check the status page at courts.state.hi.us JIMS status. The main courts site is at courts.state.hi.us. Court copy fees are $3 for the first 30 pages. Certified copies cost more.
Military personnel tried under the UCMJ are not in state court. Their cases go through the Army's own court system. Some records may be public. Many are not. You can try a FOIA request if you need to see one of those files. The request goes to the Army FOIA office, not the state. Response times vary. You may have to wait weeks or months.
If the case involves both military and civilian defendants, the state and federal systems may both hold records. You may need to search both. If a juvenile is involved, the Family Court may also have a file. Juvenile records are held back under state law.
Open Records and Schofield Barracks
Hawaii open records law is in Chapter 92F of the state code. The full text is at HRS 92F. Criminal history rules are at HRS 846. See the text at HRS 846. Expungement rules are at HRS 831. See HRS 831. These laws do not cover records held by the Army.
The Office of Information Practices handles state-level appeals. Visit oip.hawaii.gov. If you get a no on a request from HPD or the court, OIP may help. The Attorney General at ag.hawaii.gov runs statewide justice data. For more, see the list of Public Access Sites at ag.hawaii.gov/hcjdc/public-access-sites. A session at one of these sites is $25.
Expungement for a state-level arrest costs $35 for the first and $50 for each later one. For a federal arrest, the path is different. You may need to work with a lawyer. Federal expungement is rare. The Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs at dcr.hawaii.gov has some info on state records issues.
Schofield Barracks Layout
Schofield Barracks sits in central Oahu near Wahiawa. The base is home to the 25th Infantry Division. It has its own housing, gates, and support services. MPs patrol the base 24 hours a day. HPD Wahiawa is the closest civilian station. The two agencies work together on cases that cross base lines.
Many service members live on base. Some live off base in Wahiawa or nearby. An arrest made off base is a state case. An arrest made on base is a federal case for a civilian, or a military case for a service member. The location of the arrest is key to knowing where to look for records.
Note: Schofield Barracks has its own ZIP code and address system. A record search by home address may miss cases tied to base housing. Try a full name search instead.
Schofield Barracks Records Path
A Schofield Barracks busted mugshots search has two routes. For civilians, go to HPD Records on Beretania Street and check eCourt Kokua for any court filing. For service members, request info through the installation Provost Marshal office or file a FOIA request under federal rules. Records flow into both state and federal systems based on who made the arrest and where the offense happened.
Honolulu County Busted Mugshots
Schofield Barracks lies within Honolulu County. Civilian cases tied to the base go through the county and state system. For a full look at Honolulu County resources, visit the county page.
Nearby Cities
These cities are near Schofield Barracks. Each one files through the First Circuit Court system.