Hawaii
Family recalls ‘worst nightmare’ as second death tied to mainland facility caring for Hawaii mental patients
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – Hawaii News Now has learned of another mental patient death tied to a mainland facility contracted by the state health department.
Curtis Panoke was sent to the Columbia Regional Care Center from the state hospital in 2010 after multiple assaults. In 2016, other patients there beat him into a coma and he died last year.
His family is suing the facility and the state.
Hawaii News Now learned of Panoke’s death while investigating the suicide of a Kauai man named Payton Hough at that same facility.
Kauai man’s troubled path
Hough was born and raised on Kauai, but his life ended in an institution thousands of miles away. His story reveals weaknesses in how the state handles people with mental illness.
Growing up in Hanalei, “we spent so much time on the beach, always fishing, going down to the beach, camping, crabbing,” said Tanisha Baker, Hough’s sister.
“He was just so caring and compassionate and very warm,” Baker said.
Hough, who they called Makana, was a skateboarder and skilled with electronics at school.
“He came in there when the rest of the techs couldn’t get the computers up online. He went in there and troubleshooted and got it up online,” said Payton Hough Sr.
Traumatic incident triggers decline
Hough’s family believes his descent into mental illness began with an incident in Kilauea.
Michael Ebinger, who went to prison for killing a man on the same property in 1983, confronted Hough and a friend with a gun and machete.
Ebinger committed suicide the day the boys were to testify.
“When that happened, there was a change. There was a definite change in the way that he was processing things, the way that he was communicating,” his father said.
By his 20s, Hough was severely mentally ill, often homeless and on drugs. In 2013, he was arrested on a burglary charge, then acquitted and committed to the state hospital in Kaneohe.
The family maintained ties.
“We would send him letters and cards and books and a Bible and pictures of us, just to remind him that we love him, we miss him,” Baker said.
Brief improvement, then setback
As doctors adjusted his medications, Hough improved and eventually was released to a bed at Kahi Mohala and allowed to begin living in the community.
“It was like night and day. It was like, wow, son, you’re doing so good, and he would feel good, and he would be very energetic and want to do things,” his father said.
But on Halloween 2019, during a visit to the probation office at Circuit Court in Honolulu, he was accused of assaulting a sheriff.
Documents say he was taken back to the hospital, but within days he was in Oahu Community Correctional Center’s mental health module, sharing a cell with 56-year-old Jacob Russell, who he considered a friend.
Later, he told his family he couldn’t handle the close quarters.
“‘Dad, I needed space.’ He was constantly pleading for help and wanting to be heard, and they would not listen to his concerns,” his father said.
Hough lashed out against Russell in a beating court records say included multiple stomps to Russell’s head and neck area. Russell died on Christmas.
Hough was acquitted again because of mental illness, but would never leave custody again. His connection to his family deteriorated so much they called police to check on him in the hospital.
Family cut off from contact
“After I did that, things changed. Things changed. That’s when things… They shut us down completely,” his father said.
Sometime in 2024, the family learned that Hough was no longer in Hawaii. He had been transferred to the 347-bed Columbia Regional Care Center in South Carolina, a converted jail.
It happened without notice to his attorney and without any record in the courts.
The Hawaii Health Department has contracted the facility to take in the most violent of its mental patients.
Other than a brief Zoom call around Christmas, the family was denied access to Hough.
“We were fighting for him,” said his mother, Zina Hough.
“It was like they were trying to erase his voice,” said Hough Sr.
Pastor denied access
Kauai pastor Gregory Poole offered to help. He is from South Carolina and had prison ministry experience.
“I’d always had good success to basically be able to go visit as a pastor and check on that particular individual,” Poole said.
His calls were ignored. He showed up at the facility in September and was denied access to Hough, but his doctor told him things were going well and he was doing well.
“So I actually left the facility that day being very encouraged,” Poole said.
But two days before Thanksgiving, the Columbia County coroner called the family to say Hough had committed suicide.
“We were devastated. Our whole world fell apart. Our worst nightmare, the thing we’ve been trying to prevent from happening happened,” Baker said.
“While on watch, on suicide watch, he was supposed to be watched every 30 minutes, and he wasn’t,” his father said.
“It could have been different. If we could just tell him, ‘Hey, we’re thinking about you. We’re praying for you. We’re gonna come visit,’” Baker said.
“It’s tragic. There’s just no other way to say it,” Poole said.
State offers limited support
Adding to the family’s trauma, the state only offered one plane ticket for someone to collect Hough’s ashes.
They put up a GoFundMe so the family could go.
“How is one person going to go over there and pick up the remains of our son when we’re such a tight-knit family? How could the grieving process be laid on just one when it’s all, we’re all family? We’re ohana,” his father said through tears.
The state health department said it cannot discuss any individual patient, even if deceased, but said, “If the patient consents to allow family member(s) involvement in their care…. the department encourages family support and involvement in their loved ones’ care.”
The department says it currently has seven patients in South Carolina, but did not say how many have been sent over the years.
“Our plan is to bring him back back here to Hanalei Bay, where he’s been trying to get back to for years, and we’re going to do a celebration of life and scatter his ashes in Hanalei Bay,” Baker said.
While Hough may finally rest, the family won’t. The Columbia Regional Care Center did not respond to questions.
Copyright 2026 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
Hawaii
The Places Visitors Love Most In Hawaii Just Hit Their Limit
If you’ve driven Hana Highway recently, as we have, tried to wedge your rental car onto the shoulder at Honolua Bay, inched along North Shore behind an hours-long nonstop line of brake lights, or followed a social media pin taking you to Hoopii Falls, Hawaii just put those exact places into specific future plans.
The state updated plans naming specific beaches, roads, trails, and bays where visitor pressure is highest and outlining what officials say could change at each. The first round of these (DMAPs) leaned heavily on broader goals and community meetings. The latest version, however, now lists the individual sites and attaches proposed actions. These are among the most in-demand places people build into their trips, not some policy abstractions.
Before assuming your next trip will look dramatically different, one basic reality is worth noting. The Hawaii Tourism Authority does not manage the roads, trails, bays, or neighborhoods in question, so the counties, DLNR, Hawaiian Home Lands, and private landowners will be needed to carry out most of what has just been described. In almost every case, the first year at least is focused on more studies, coordination, and setting up of what might come next.
Maui: Hana and Honolua finally get specific plans.
Maui’s plan centers squarely on the iconic Hana Highway, with six of the island’s nine site-specific actions targeting that single corridor.
The ideas are relatively straightforward. Paid community stewards at high-traffic stops such as Keanae Peninsula, a first-of-its-kind Hawaii tour guide certification program requiring culturally accurate mo’olelo (storytelling), safety guidance, and place-based knowledge instead of loosely scripted commentary, together with clearer signage identifying safe and legal pullouts while reminding drivers to let residents pass instead of backing up traffic for visitor photo opportunities.
At Bamboo Forest off Hana Highway, the plan addresses repeated trespassing onto private land. There have been 35 rescues there over the past decade, most requiring use of emergency helicopters. The proposal calls for signage clearly indicating no access. But because that land is privately owned, any real restriction there depends on the owner’s full cooperation.
Honolua Bay carries perhaps the boldest concept of all in the statewide package of suggested changes, including a reservation and shuttle system to eliminate illegal roadside parking, a cultural trail staffed by stewards before visitors ever reach the water, and water stewards who will be paddling out to orient snorkel boat passengers. No procurement process has started, and no shuttle contract exists, so the idea remains on paper for now. Kaupo, where a recently paved road has attracted more traffic and complaints, would also get sensor-linked warning signs at blind hills to focus on driving safety.
Big Island: Kealakekua Bay may see closings.
Kealakekua Bay is the main headline site here, as might be expected. The draft introduces the possibility of “rest days” during coral spawning or other sensitive periods, coordinated by the DLNR, when the bay would be closed to visitors. It is still a concept and would require coordination beyond HTA.
At Keaukaha near Hilo, cruise ship impacts drive the conversation ideas, and the community has pushed for a permanent role in shaping how visitor flow is handled around the port. A steward program piloted in 2023 is now being formalized rather than remaining as a short-term experiment.
South Point, or Ka Lae, sits on Hawaiian Home Lands, so the state’s role here is to support the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands’ existing plan rather than create a new one from scratch. Hilo itself is described as needing more visitor activity even as other Big Island sites seek to manage crowding.


Oahu: North Shore, pillboxes, and parking reality.
On Oahu, it’s the iconic North Shore that anchors the plan. Five sequenced actions are listed, but the first year focuses on studies, coordination, and groundwork.
There is no shuttle system scheduled for immediate rollout and no reservation platform ready to launch. During the public webinar, officials said any fees would be site-specific and pointed to the extremely limited parking infrastructure as a major constraint.
Lanikai Pillboxes and Maili Pillbox are cited as trails that have seen steep increases in use due to social media exposure. Lanikai already has daytime parking restrictions on residential streets between 10 am and 4 pm, and Maili has experienced a recent fatality. The plan for Lanikai is to evaluate managed access, while for Maili, it begins with determining who is responsible for the trail and what authority exists in order to manage it.
Downtown Honolulu appears in the draft as a future walkable corridor linking Iolani Palace, Honolulu Hale, and nearby historic sites and shops.
Kauai: this waterfall became a neighborhood fight.
Hoopii Falls in Kapaa has become one of the most tense sites in the statewide plans. What was once a local waterfall became a high-traffic destination after intense social media exposure. The trail crosses private, lease, and state lands and is not formally maintained, and residents have placed rocks and tree stumps at neighborhood access points to slow or block visitor flow. The plan’s near-term focus is to gather more data and bring landowners together to clarify jurisdiction and what can legally be done before any formal access system is devised.
The Kapaa Crawl along Kuhio Highway is listed as a priority, but the proposed response, which is a shuttle and visitor hub concept centered on Coconut Marketplace, has no funding, no operator, and no timeline.
Kokee and Waimea Canyon are also included. Two of four proposed actions are already deferred beyond the first funding year, and the near-term steps focus has moved to installing visitor counters and studying whether a reservation system would be feasible.
What changes on your next trip.
Across all four islands, social media is repeatedly cited as a significant accelerant, turning lesser-known spots into must-see stops almost overnight. And in that regard, there is no end in sight.
There are no additional statewide fees attached to these newly identified sites, no disclosed budgets for even the most ambitious concepts, and HTA does not gain or lose any new enforcement authority through these drafts.
If you are visiting in the coming months, you are unlikely to encounter reservation systems at Honolua Bay, formalized rest-day closures at Kealakekua, shuttles operating on the North Shore, or state-managed access changes at Ho’opi’i. Most of what is described for year one is groundwork.
You can review the full island-by-island drafts here: https://www.hawaiitourismauthority.org/what-we-do/destination-management-action-plans/
Do these plans go far enough or too far at the sites you know best? Get Breaking Hawaii Travel News
Hawaii
Hawaii County Surf Forecast for March 04, 2026 | Big Island Now
Forecast for Big Island Windward and Southeast
| Shores | Tonight | Wednesday | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Surf | Surf | |||
| PM | AM | AM | PM | |
| North Facing | 2-4 | 2-4 | 2-4 | 2-4 |
| East Facing | 3-5 | 4-6 | 4-6 | 5-7 |
| South Facing | 1-3 | 1-3 | 1-3 | 1-3 |
| Weather | Mostly cloudy. Numerous showers. | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low Temperature | In the upper 60s. | ||||||
| Winds | East winds 5 to 10 mph. | ||||||
|
|||||||
| Weather | Partly sunny. Numerous showers. | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| High Temperature | In the upper 70s. | |||||
| Winds | East winds 10 to 15 mph. | |||||
|
||||||
| Sunrise | 6:37 AM HST. | |||||
| Sunset | 6:27 PM HST. | |||||
Forecast for Big Island Leeward
| Shores | Tonight | Wednesday | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Surf | Surf | |||
| PM | AM | AM | PM | |
| West Facing | 2-4 | 2-4 | 2-4 | 1-3 |
| South Facing | 1-3 | 1-3 | 1-3 | 1-3 |
| Weather | Mostly sunny until 6 PM, then mostly cloudy. Hazy. |
||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low Temperature | In the upper 60s. | ||||||||||
| Winds | West winds around 5 mph early in the afternoon, becoming light and variable. |
||||||||||
|
|||||||||||
| Weather | Partly sunny. Hazy. | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| High Temperature | In the mid 80s. | ||||||||
| Winds | Light and variable winds, becoming west around 5 mph in the afternoon. |
||||||||
|
|||||||||
| Sunrise | 6:41 AM HST. | ||||||||
| Sunset | 6:31 PM HST. | ||||||||
The current moderate northwest swell will continue a gradual decline through Thursday. A small west-northwest swell will arrive on Friday and hold through the weekend, followed by a small north-northwest swell early next week. Choppy east shore surf will build to near seasonal average by Wednesday as trade winds strengthen over and east of the islands. Little change is expected along east facing shores through the weekend, followed by a possible decline early next week if winds veer southerly. Surf along south facing shores will remain small to tiny through the weekend, and some islands may an increase in choppy surf if southerly winds develop early next week.
NORTH EAST
am
pm
Surf: Minimal (ankle high or less) surf.
Conditions: Semi choppy with ESE winds 5-10mph in the morning increasing to 10-15mph in the afternoon.
NORTH WEST
am
pm
Surf: Minimal (ankle high or less) surf.
Conditions: Clean in the early morning with ESE winds less than 5mph. Bumpy/semi bumpy conditions move in during the morning hours with the winds shifting W 5-10mph.
WEST
am
pm
Surf: Minimal (ankle high or less) surf.
Conditions: Semi glassy in the morning with N winds less than 5mph. Bumpy/semi bumpy conditions for the afternoon with the winds shifting WNW 5-10mph.
SOUTH EAST
am
pm
Surf: Minimal (ankle high or less) surf.
Conditions: Light sideshore texture in the morning with NE winds 10-15mph. This becomes Sideshore texture/chop for the afternoon.
Data Courtesy of NOAA.gov and SwellInfo.com
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