• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • About
  • The Magazine
  • Events
  • Partners
  • Products
  • Contact
  • Jobs and Careers
  • Advertise
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Subscribe
American Police Beat

American Police Beat Magazine

Law Enforcement Publication

  • Home
  • Leadership
    • Smart power
      Can your staff keep pace with your leadership goals?
      Your agency needs you
      Pursuit termination option: Radiator disablement
      Liability — not always a showstopper!
  • Topics
    • Leadership
      • Smart power
        Can your staff keep pace with your leadership goals?
        Your agency needs you
        Pursuit termination option: Radiator disablement
        Liability — not always a showstopper!
    • Editor’s Picks
      • Mental health checks … in the training room?
        Crime doesn’t take a vacation
        The power of mediation
        Therapy isn’t just for the broken
        Police humor only a cop would understand
    • On the Job
      • The power of calm-edy
        Domestic violence
        Code Red, all hands on deck
        Texas manhunt captures suspect in shooting of officer and K-9
        “Wanna hop in?” Louisiana officer gets a lift from a good...
    • Labor
      • When you are falsely accused
        Is anyone listening?
        The power of mediation
        Differentiation in police recruitment
        Building positive media relations
    • Tech
      • Gear that moves with you
        A new breed of cop car
        The future of patrol is here
        New York governor highlights $24 million investment to modernize law...
        Cutting-edge police technology
    • Training
      • The untrained trainer
        The vision behind precision
        Mentorship: Ensuring future success
        Unlocking innovation
        Training dipshittery
    • Policy
      • New Mexico’s Law Enforcement Retention Fund keeps experienced,...
        The phenomenon of trauma bonding in law enforcement
        Betrayed from within
        Supreme Court declines to revive Missouri gun law
        Quotas come to the end of the road
    • Health/Wellness
      • Maintain your mental armor
        Beyond crisis response
        Mental health checks … in the training room?
        Surviving and thriving in retirement
        Fit for duty, fit for life
    • Community
      • Community engagement: What is it moving forward?
        Contradictory crossroads
        Back-to-school season brings out police support nationwide
        A bold idea for reducing homelessness in America
        Operation Brain Freeze keeps community cool
    • Offbeat
      • An unexpected burglar
        Police humor only a cop would understand
        Not eggzactly a perfect heist
        Pizza … with a side of alligator?
        Wisconsin man charged with impersonating Border Patrol agent twice in...
    • We Remember
      • A Christmas loss
        York County ambush leaves three officers dead, others critically...
        Honoring the Fallen Heroes of 9/11
        Team Romeo
        National Police Week 2025
    • HOT Mail
      • The War on Cops Continues Unabated
  • On the Job
    • The power of calm-edy
      Domestic violence
      Code Red, all hands on deck
      Texas manhunt captures suspect in shooting of officer and K-9
      “Wanna hop in?” Louisiana officer gets a lift from a good...
  • Labor
    • When you are falsely accused
      Is anyone listening?
      The power of mediation
      Differentiation in police recruitment
      Building positive media relations
  • Tech
    • Gear that moves with you
      A new breed of cop car
      The future of patrol is here
      New York governor highlights $24 million investment to modernize law...
      Cutting-edge police technology
  • Training
    • The untrained trainer
      The vision behind precision
      Mentorship: Ensuring future success
      Unlocking innovation
      Training dipshittery
  • Policy
    • New Mexico’s Law Enforcement Retention Fund keeps experienced,...
      The phenomenon of trauma bonding in law enforcement
      Betrayed from within
      Supreme Court declines to revive Missouri gun law
      Quotas come to the end of the road
  • Health/Wellness
    • Maintain your mental armor
      Beyond crisis response
      Mental health checks … in the training room?
      Surviving and thriving in retirement
      Fit for duty, fit for life
  • Community
    • Community engagement: What is it moving forward?
      Contradictory crossroads
      Back-to-school season brings out police support nationwide
      A bold idea for reducing homelessness in America
      Operation Brain Freeze keeps community cool
  • Offbeat
    • An unexpected burglar
      Police humor only a cop would understand
      Not eggzactly a perfect heist
      Pizza … with a side of alligator?
      Wisconsin man charged with impersonating Border Patrol agent twice in...
  • We Remember
    • A Christmas loss
      York County ambush leaves three officers dead, others critically...
      Honoring the Fallen Heroes of 9/11
      Team Romeo
      National Police Week 2025
  • HOT Mail
    • The War on Cops Continues Unabated
  • About
  • The Magazine
  • Events
  • Partners
  • Products
  • Contact
  • Jobs and Careers
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
Search

Policy

“We are Maui Strong”: Maui Police Department releases after-action report on Lahaina wildfire response

APB Team Published February 16, 2024 @ 12:00 pm PST

State Farm via Wikimedia Commons

Nearly six months after the Lahaina wildfire devastated the picturesque Hawaiian community, the Maui Police Department has finally released a comprehensive after-action report detailing their response to the catastrophe.

The report, spanning 98 pages, outlines 32 recommendations aimed at enhancing the department’s capabilities in handling similar emergencies in the future.

The deadly wildfire, which occurred on August 8, 2023, claimed the lives of at least 100 people, leaving a wake of destruction in the one-time capital of the former Hawaiian Kingdom.

In the wake of the tragedy, the Maui Police Department initiated a thorough evaluation of their response efforts, seeking to identify areas of improvement and lessons learned.

Among the key recommendations highlighted in the report are enhancements to equipment and technology, such as providing officers with earpieces for improved communication during hazardous conditions like high winds and equipping patrol cars with breaching kits to clear obstructed roadways.

The report also underscores the importance of establishing better communication channels between emergency personnel and officers on the ground, including stationing high-ranking officers in the island’s communications center during emergencies.

“Seconds matter. One of the things we talked about was having a real-time crime center or real-time operations center,” Maui Chief Pelletier iterated. “The item is one of the dozens of recommendations outlined in the report.”

Chief Pelletier said the report is useful not only as a guide for the department’s future actions but also as a resource for law enforcement agencies nationwide.

“We don’t know what the next critical incident is going to be or where it’s going to happen,” Chief Pelletier stated during a press conference, “but if we can identify these action items, maybe another agency can incorporate them too, making the entire policing profession and first responder community better prepared.”

Reflecting on the painstaking search efforts following the wildfire, Chief Pelletier commended the hard work and dedication of officers, personnel and community members.

“The bravery and resilience demonstrated by our officers, personnel, fellow first responders, and members of the community who continued to assist while suffering losses themselves have been nothing short of extraordinary,” he remarked.

As of now, three individuals remain unaccounted for.

“The investigations remain open and any new leads or information that is brought to us, we will pursue,” Maui Officer Brad Taylor informed the public. “Since the investigation, we have reached out to the family members, searched for eyewitness accounts of where they might have been, and then we looked at a map and with what we knew about their mobility, we created strategies of where they might have escaped to, and then we sent anthropological teams to go to those estimated escape routes.”

The after-action report also delves into the ongoing investigation into the cause of the wildfire, which is being conducted by outside experts at the behest of the Hawaii attorney general’s office.

Speculation from various reports, such as AP News, cited high winds as a contributing factor, marking an overgrown gully beneath an electric power line as the potential ground zero of the blaze.

While the investigation is expected to take several more months to complete, authorities remain committed to pursuing leads and providing closure to affected families.

“The search is not over,” Taylor confirmed.

Looking ahead, the Maui Police Department is focused on implementing the recommendations outlined in the report, with Chief Pelletier looking to enhance emergency response capabilities.

“Imagine if you could detect smoke from a fire in real-time that’s faster than 9-1-1,” he added.

The chief concluded the press conference with reassurances about the search efforts and investigations.

“This community deserves the very best, and this agency is the very finest,” Chief Pelletier affirmed. “We put service above self. We put honor above all. These were our worst hours, but these were also our finest moments. We are Maui Strong.”

Categories: Policy Tags: Search and Rescue, communication, equipment, emergency management, Hawaii, Maui, Lahaina wildfire, Maui Police Department, after-action report, catastrophe

Primary Sidebar

Recent Articles

  • When you are falsely accused
  • The untrained trainer
  • Maintain your mental armor
  • Smart power
  • The power of calm-edy
  • Can your staff keep pace with your leadership goals?
  • New Mexico’s Law Enforcement Retention Fund keeps experienced, certified officers in state
  • Domestic violence
  • Is anyone listening?
  • Gear that moves with you

Footer

Our Mission
To serve as a trusted voice of the nation’s law enforcement community, providing informative, entertaining and inspiring content on interesting and engaging topics affecting peace officers today.

Contact us: info@apbweb.com | (800) 234-0056.

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter

Categories

  • Editor’s Picks
  • On the Job
  • Labor
  • Tech
  • Training
  • Policy
  • Health/Wellness
  • Community
  • Offbeat
  • We Remember
  • Jobs and Careers
  • Events

Editor’s Picks

Mental health checks … in the training room?

Mental health checks … in the training room?

November 25, 2025

Crime doesn’t take a vacation

Crime doesn’t take a vacation

November 21, 2025

The power of mediation

The power of mediation

November 20, 2025

Therapy isn’t just for the broken

Therapy isn’t just for the broken

November 14, 2025

Policies | Consent Preferences | Copyright © 2026 APB Media, LLC | Website design, development and maintenance by 911MEDIA

Open

Subscribe

Close

Receive the latest news and updates from American Police Beat directly to your inbox!

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.