State of Hawaii Department of the Attorney General


The Criminal Investigations Division conducts investigations in support of the department's civil, criminal, and administrative cases. These investigations involve such areas as homeland security; Internet crimes against children; high technology computer crimes; drug nuisance abatement; environmental crimes; tobacco tax enforcement; airport, harbors, and highways; cold homicide cases; and other criminal and civil matters.

Criminal Investigations Division

Attorney General, Criminal Investigations Division is the law enforcement agency for the Hawaii Department of the Attorney General. It is tasked with full state police powers to enforces all state laws and department rules, conducts investigations of the most complex, confidential, and diverse civil and criminal cases being considered or readied for court action and prosecution; obtains additional information, evidence, and facts to clarify or substantiate findings of law enforcement agencies; secures, interviews, and interrogates witnesses complainants, and suspects; conducts highly confidential investigations for the Attorney General's Office; special career criminal suppression investigations; arrest subjects, processes and serves legal papers; conduct warrant investigations and extraditions.

Chief Special Investigator

The Chief Special Investigator is responsible for planning, administering, organizing, and directing a statewide investigations program. As chief of the Investigations Division of the Department of the Attorney General, the sole position in this class is responsible for developing program plans to achieve program goals and objectives; developing operational policies and procedures; developing and implementing the program's budget; clearly communicating with, advising, and updating superiors in a timely manner; recommending new laws, rules and regulations; testifying before the Legislature; and establishing and maintaining extensive public contacts with representatives of other international, State, federal, and county agencies to share information and collaborate on law enforcement projects and activities.
The statewide investigations program provides specialized investigative services to State departments and agencies and may collaborate with other jurisdictions on projects of mutual concern. It involves the conduct of a broad range of investigations of suspected or actual violations of criminal, civil, and other administrative laws, rules and regulations. The investigation cases are highly sensitive and confidential in nature, dealing with crimes of fraud, theft, corruption, violence, and subversive activities which involve government officials and employees.
Investigations may include allegations of improper and unethical conduct by State employees, appointed officials, and public officers; tort, damage, flood and injury claims; traffic accidents or other accidents occurring on State-owned property; organized crime activities; corruption by public employees and officials; assaults, stabbings, and murder in State correctional facilities; and any other situation where enforcement and investigative assistance is requested.

Senior command staff

Type A: An investigator independently performing the full range of investigations which are regularly of a complex nature, where the violations are related to a specific program area;
Type B: One or two investigators who are responsible for the small investigative program in an agency, without higher level investigative supervisory guidance;
Type C: The working supervisory investigator in an agency where investigations are carried out according to standard policies and procedures, from planning through fact-finding to reporting the results of the investigations.
Investigators at the VI level may occasionally work on the most complex investigations, which involve highly controversial issues and extremely complex problems. At this level, positions develop operating policies and procedures; resolve operational problems; recommend new laws, rules and regulations or recommend revisions; testify before the legislature; prepare budget requests and develop training programs; analyze evidence and write narrative reports on the status and findings of investigations; and coordinate with law enforcement officers and other agencies.
Investigators have the powers and privileges of police officers with statewide jurisdiction to effect arrest and conduct investigations. Most investigators are experienced law enforcement officer with other federal, state or local police agencies prior to being employed with the Division.
Conducts investigations of the most complex, confidential, and diverse civil/criminal cases being considered and/or readied for court action and prosecution; obtains additional information, evidence, and facts to clarify or substantiate findings of law enforcement agencies; secures, interviews, and interrogates witnesses complainants, and suspects; conducts highly confidential investigations.
The Attorney General of Hawaii is the chief legal and law enforcement officer of Hawaii. In present-day statehood within the United States, he or she is appointed by the elected governor with the approval of the state senate and is responsible for a state department charged with advising the various other departments and agencies of state government. He or she is responsible for the prosecution of offenses to the constitution and prescribed laws called Hawaii Revised Statutes. The Attorney General can only be removed by an act of the state senate. In rare occasions, the Attorney General serves as acting governor in the absence of both the governor and lieutenant governor from the state for an extended period of time.

Ranks structure

Attorney General Criminal Investigations Unit uses the Hawaii State Law Enforcement Rank Structure:
Department of the Attorney General
425 Queen Street
Honolulu, HI 96813
Telephone: 586-1500
Fax: 586-1239

County Prosecutor's Office, Criminal Investigation Units

The County Prosecutor's Office, Criminal Investigation Units come under the authority and are subordinate to the Hawaii Department of the Attorney General and work closely with and perform investigations for the Attorney General. County Prosecutor Investigators also have the powers and privileges of police officers with state wide jurisdiction to effect arrest and conduct investigations.