Schofield Barracks Jail Roster Search

The Schofield Barracks jail roster is split across two tracks. Schofield Barracks is a census-designated place in central Oahu that shares ground with a large US Army installation, so some names land in military hands and others go to the Honolulu Police Department. To search the Schofield Barracks jail roster for a civilian, start with VINELink, the HPD adult arrest log, and a call to OCCC. For military personnel, the Army Garrison and the Provost Marshal handle the intake. Federal prosecutions from either jurisdiction may end up at the Federal Detention Center in Honolulu.

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Schofield Barracks Overview

~14K Population
Honolulu County
Central Oahu
CDP Army Post

US Army Garrison Hawaii

Schofield Barracks is home to US Army Garrison Hawaii. Military law enforcement runs matters that involve soldiers, family members on post, and cases that occur on federal land inside the installation. The Provost Marshal's office oversees the military police. Holds for soldiers may route through the Army's own pretrial confinement process, not through the civilian Schofield Barracks jail roster held by the state.

Civilians visiting or working on post can also end up in the Army's initial custody if they are stopped by military police, but federal rules govern what happens next. In many mixed cases, the case is handed to HPD or the US Attorney for the District of Hawaii. Because of this split, a name search for the Schofield Barracks jail roster sometimes needs two or three steps. Start with the civilian tools, then widen the net.

The US Army Garrison Hawaii website is the starting point for any post-specific question. It has current gate hours, base access rules, and directory info for the Provost Marshal.

Schofield Barracks US Army Garrison Hawaii jail roster

The official garrison page above is where families and attorneys begin the hunt for a Schofield Barracks jail roster match tied to military law enforcement.

Note: Military pretrial confinement records are not public the way a civilian jail roster is. Attorneys and next of kin should go through the Staff Judge Advocate.

The Honolulu Police Department covers civilian law enforcement in and around the Schofield Barracks community. If the arrest occurs off post, off federal land, or involves a civilian with no military tie, the case moves through HPD. That means the name shows up on the HPD adult arrest log and, if held, on the Schofield Barracks jail roster kept through OCCC.

Civilian arrests in the Schofield Barracks area get processed through the Central Receiving Division at HPD's Alapai headquarters. Alapai is at 801 South Beretania Street in Honolulu. It is open around the clock for intake. The Central Receiving cell block is the first stop before a person is moved to OCCC or released.

Schofield Barracks HPD Honolulu Police Department jail roster

The HPD homepage shown above is the main civilian gateway for any Schofield Barracks jail roster question about a non-military booking.

HPD posts its adult arrest logs online. Entries stay up for 14 days. The log covers name, age, sex, race, offense, and officer. Juvenile data never appears. Older logs need a written records request through the Records and Identification Division.

Oahu Community Correctional Center

OCCC is the state jail that holds most civilian arrests from the Schofield Barracks area. The address is 2199 Kamehameha Highway, Honolulu, HI 96819. The main phone is (808) 832-1777. It has about 950 beds and handles adults who are pretrial or serving short sentences. OCCC is run by the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation.

OCCC also runs intake for all of Oahu through its Central Receiving Division. Any civilian name on the Schofield Barracks jail roster likely moved through Central Receiving first. Business hours run 8 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. every day except state holidays. Visitation is from 7:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. daily, and it must be booked ahead by calling (808) 832-1633 between 9 a.m. and noon.

Schofield Barracks Oahu Community Correctional Center jail roster facility

The official OCCC facility page shown above lists deposit rules, mail rules, and visitation steps that apply to every Schofield Barracks jail roster entry.

Facility Oahu Community Correctional Center (OCCC)
Address 2199 Kamehameha Highway
Honolulu, HI 96819
Main Phone (808) 832-1777
Visitation Line (808) 832-1633
Run By Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation

HPD District 2 Wahiawa

The nearest HPD district station is District 2 in Wahiawa. It sits just outside the Schofield Barracks gates and handles calls for the surrounding civilian community. The phone is (808) 723-8700. Officers out of District 2 often write the arrest paperwork that seeds a Schofield Barracks jail roster entry at OCCC.

For questions about a pending case, the district station can point you to the right detective or watch commander. For the underlying police report, go to the Records and Identification Division at 801 South Beretania Street. HPD also publishes a guide for pulling closed-case police reports. Reports are released only when the case is closed. Fees are low. The first page is 50 cents, extra pages are 25 cents.

Federal Detention Center Honolulu

Some Schofield Barracks cases end up in federal court, not state court. That can happen when a crime takes place on federal land inside the installation, when the US Attorney picks up a case from military jurisdiction, or when federal drug or weapons charges apply. People charged federally are held at the Federal Detention Center Honolulu at 351 Elliott Street. The main phone is (808) 838-4200.

Federal inmates do not appear on the civilian state Schofield Barracks jail roster. Use the BOP inmate locator to confirm a federal hold. The locator covers any person booked into federal custody since 1982. Search by name and date of birth, or by BOP register number.

Schofield Barracks Federal Detention Center Honolulu jail roster

The BOP facility page for FDC Honolulu above has visitation hours, mail rules, and the main admin line for any Schofield Barracks jail roster case that has moved into federal hands.

Note: Check both the state VINELink and the federal BOP locator before giving up on a search. Mixed-jurisdiction Schofield Barracks cases sometimes switch tracks without notice.

Schofield Barracks Jail Roster Laws

Two state laws shape the civilian Schofield Barracks jail roster. The first is HRS Chapter 353. That chapter gives the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation the legal duty to keep records on every person in state custody. It is the root of the jail roster itself. Every name booked into OCCC is logged under the authority of Chapter 353.

The second is the Uniform Information Practices Act, or UIPA, at HRS Chapter 92F. UIPA is the state sunshine law. It sets what government records are open to the public and what is shielded. The 14-day HPD arrest log is posted under UIPA. HRS ยง 846-9 limits access to non-conviction arrest data, which is why the HPD log is rotated off after two weeks. The interaction of Chapter 353 and UIPA is why you can see who is in custody today but may not see a clean arrest history for a person who was never convicted.

Federal law controls federal detention. The Privacy Act and BOP policy shape what the federal inmate locator will return. Military records sit under the Uniform Code of Military Justice and related Army rules. A Schofield Barracks jail roster search that crosses all three systems often needs help from an attorney.

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Honolulu County

Schofield Barracks is part of the City and County of Honolulu. For the full picture of civilian intake, OCCC contact info, and HPD district coverage, see the Honolulu County jail roster page.

Nearby Cities

Central Oahu communities near Schofield Barracks share the same HPD District 2 station and the same OCCC intake. If a Schofield Barracks jail roster search misses, try a nearby community next.