Hawaii DUI Record Search
59 of 109 accident related fatalities in Hawaii in 2009 were caused by drivers operating a vehicle under the influence of an intoxicant (OVUII). In 52 of those 59 cases, the driver had a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of .08 or above. A BAC of .08 or higher exceeds the legal limit, and that means that the driver will be charged with an OVUII crime. A professional driver with a commercial license has a BAC of .04, while a driver under the age of 21 has a BAC limit of .02.
Hawaii has an escalating set of penalties that depend on the number of OVUII convictions a driver has. For the first conviction, a driver will spend from 48 hours to 5 days in jail. If there was a child under 15 years old in the vehicle, the driver will spend an additional 48 hours in jail. Fines range from $150 to $1,500. Their license will be suspended from 30 to 90 days. If the drivers BAC was .15 or above, then their license can be suspended for 6 months. Hawaii also requires 72 hours of community service from a first time offender, and demands that they complete a substance abuse education program.
For a third OVUII conviction in Hawaii, a driver face 10 to 30 days is prison. The required fine also increases to $500 to $2,500. Their license will be revoked for a full 2 year period. The driver is also required to complete a longer substance abuse education program. If a child under the age of 15 was in the car, then there is an additional 48 hours in jail, and another $500 fine.
| Hawaii County | Honolulu County | Kalawao County | Kauai County |
| Maui County | |||