How to Find Hawaii Wanted Persons & Warrants

There is no nationwide warrant database. The Hawaii State Police, county sheriffs, and local police agencies each publish their own most-wanted lists. Active warrants can only be confirmed by contacting the issuing court or law enforcement agency.

  • Hawaii State Police: official statewide wanted persons portal.
  • Most Wanted list: the State Police publishes featured fugitives online.
  • U.S. Marshals: usmarshals.gov/wanted for federal fugitives.
  • FBI Wanted: fbi.gov/wanted for federal cases.
  • County sheriffs maintain local wanted lists — see the individual county pages.
Population
1,435,138
Households
475,000
Median Income
$94,814
Median Home Value
$764,800

Wants & Warrants Databases

4 official Hawaii wants & warrants sources.

Wants & Warrants

Honolulu County | Most Wanted
Official Free
Most Wanted list from Honolulu Crimestoppers.
Maui County Wanted Fugitives & Unsolved Crimes
Official Free
Browse this Maui County, Hawaii Police Department list of wanted individual and unsolved crimes.
Most Wanted | Bank Robbers
Official Free
Persons wanted for bank crimes in Honolulu.
Honolulu CrimeStoppers | Wanted Suspects
Official Free
Current wanted suspects with active warrants from Honolulu CrimeStoppers.

Hawaii Counties

All 5 Hawaii counties. Click any county for local court, sheriff, recorder and assessor links.

Frequently Asked Questions

There is no free public warrant lookup. Contact the court in the county where the warrant was issued, or the local police agency. The Hawaii state judiciary public portal may show open criminal cases.

The Hawaii State Police publishes a featured most-wanted list. Individual sheriffs and city police departments also keep their own lists.

For federal fugitives, see the U.S. Marshals Service and FBI Wanted lists.

No. An arrest record documents that someone was taken into custody. A warrant is a court order authorizing arrest. Both are filed at the court in the issuing county.

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