Hawaii
Hawaii Police Department wants state Supreme Court to block judge from releasing new details in Dana Ireland investigation
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – A circuit court judge in Hilo is expected to defend his decision to release new evidence in the Dana Ireland murder investigation to the Hawaii Innocence Project.
Judge Peter Kubota is expected to submit his filing to the state Supreme Court by Thursday, the deadline for filing his response to the Hawaii Police Department’s petition challenging a subpoena for the information.
HPD wants the state Supreme Court to block the release of information about new suspect Albert Lauro, Jr.
Attorney Brian Black of the Public First Law Center said the justices seem ready to move quickly.
“They set a fast track for people to answer and respond,” Black said about the deadlines the court put in for Judge Kubota and the Hawaii Innocence Project to respond to HPD’s claims.
“It will be interesting to see what the court does,” Black said the justices could decline to weigh in at all if they don’t think that the police department has met its burden.
That would leave Kubota’s decision in place to release the information as part of a subpoena filed by the Hawaii Innocence Project on behalf of two men who were wrongfully convicted of killing Dana Ireland in 1991.
Kubota vacated the convictions last year. Now, the two men, brothers Albert Ian and Shawn Schweitzer, want Kubota to declare them ‘innocent’ so they can apply for compensation.
Ian Schweitzer spent 23 years in prison for the murder.
The new information at stake comes from the investigation into Lauro, who was recently identified as Ireland’s attacker using DNA technology. Lauro was a match to the sperm, skin, and sweat recovered from various pieces of evidence found at the crime scene and from Ireland’s rape kit.
HIP believes the evidence will help prove the Schweitzer brothers are innocent.
“You got a man that’s dead who can’t be prosecuted, but they’re using that as an excuse not to allow us to see what he said and other evidence that further goes to exonerate our clients,” said Ken Lawson of the HIP.
Among the items HIP seeks in the subpoena are recordings HPD made of Lauro’s interview on July 19, four days before he killed himself.
Also, there are recordings of police interviews with family members.
Lauro was first identified as a possible match using genetic testing earlier this year.
In its efforts to sway the Hawaii Supreme Court to take action, HPD said in its petition that the new developments are part of “the underlying and ongoing criminal investigation.”
HPD also said the premature release of evidence could “hinder their ability to control or shape the investigation,” as well as enable targets to elude detection, but the department doesn’t mention who these targets are or who else they are investigating now that Lauro is dead.
“They’re claiming that they have a pending investigation. They’re claiming that disclosing it will harm the investigation, but they’re just making blanket statements along those lines,” Black said.
If the Hawaii Supreme Court sides with HPD, the evidence could be secret for many more years.
Black said he was also surprised that HPD cited an exemption under the Uniform Information Practices Act in their petition, which said that releasing evidence would interfere with a “legitimate government function.”
Black doesn’t think the Uniformed Information Practices Act applies in this case because the records are part of litigation and not public disclosure.
The court is not expected to weigh in on the evidence itself but on the “standards,” according to Black.
Copyright 2024 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
Hawaii
Police recover 19 gaming machines, $7K in Kakaako gambling bust
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – The Honolulu Police Department shut down an illegal gambling operation in Kakaako.
On Thursday, officers with the Narcotics/Vice Gambling detail, along with the District 1 Crime Reduction Unit, Forfeiture Detail and Specialized Services Division, executed a search on a property on Kawaiahao Street.
HPD said they recovered 19 gaming machines and more than $7,000 in cash.
The department said they remain committed to addressing illegal gambling operations.
“The June 25, 2026, operation is the 19th illegal gambling search warrant executed so far in 2026 and the third in the month of June,” said HPD Maj. Jerome Pacarro. “Enforcing the law against these illegal operations helps prevent related criminal activity from taking root and strengthens the safety of our communities.”
To report illegal gambling, call the Narcotics/Vice 24-hour hotline at (808) 723-3933 or use the online form here.
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
Hawaii
Hilo Pride parade and festival on Saturday – Hawaii Tribune-Herald
Hawaii
Scientists say major earthquakes feel frequent, but activity is on track
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – Over the last month, strong earthquakes of magnitude 6.0 and higher have rocked the Philippines, Japan, Venezuela, and even Hawaii.
Researchers have been closely monitoring the activity, and while it may seem like more quakes than normal, they say it’s about on par with forecasts.
“This is all pretty normal for earthquakes. On a given year, we expect around 15 between magnitude 7 and 8, and about 150 between magnitude 6 and 7,” said Helen Janiszewski, assistant professor at the University of Hawaii at Manoa’s Department of Earth Sciences.
The quakes are, however, hitting in more populated places compared to some large earthquakes in past years, making them more noticeable.
“A couple years ago, there was an actual very similar, sequence of earthquakes to the one that we had in Venezuela where it was, 7.8 and 8.1 in very close sequence, but it was here, where no one lives,” Janiszewski said, pointing to the Southern Atlantic Ocean on a map.
Despite advancements in technology, researchers say there’s still no way to precisely predict when and where the next big earthquake will strike. But some seismology enthusiasts believe patterns can be monitored, studied, and used to implement potential life-saving warnings.
“I think it’s something that could happen as well across the world if people, scientists got together and really understood what’s happening. And then governments also utilize this knowledge to better notify and warn their citizens,” Pahoa resident Bob Gentzel said.
There are upwards of 100 seismographs throughout Hawaii constantly monitoring for quake activity.
Very subtle energy from the Venezuela quake was mapped traveling through the continent.
Some hope investments will be made in early-warning technology, as well as individual emergency preparedness.
“I’m just trying to prove the point that they can be forecastable because I want to save lives,” Gentzel said.
Janiszewski added, “There’s a lot that we can do still in the interim, both on an individual scale for preparedness in your own home as well as investment at community and state levels.”
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
-
Kentucky2 minutes agoKentucky Arts Council's Celebrating the Black Experience Art Exhibit to visit NKY in November
-
Louisiana9 minutes agoPolls open for Louisiana runoff election | Everything you need to know
-
Maine12 minutes ago
Maine Marine Patrol launches newest, largest patrol vessel in its fleet
-
Maryland17 minutes agoOff-and-on weekend showers before intense heat builds in Maryland
-
Michigan24 minutes ago4-star WR recruit commits to SEC power over Michigan Football
-
Massachusetts27 minutes agoCould ‘Golden Girls’-style homesharing solve the state’s housing woes? – The Boston Globe
-
Minnesota32 minutes agoWho’s the greatest Minnesota high school athlete of all time? Vote now in ‘USA 250’ poll
-
Mississippi39 minutes ago‘Mississippi firsts’ from Neshoba County Fair