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DCR Employee Charged with Fraud, Theft, Identity Theft

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Summary

The Hawaii Department of the Attorney General's Special Investigation and Prosecution Division charged DCR employee Julianne Kaniaupio with nine criminal charges including Fraud, Official Misconduct, Credit Card Theft, Fraudulent Use of Credit Card, Unauthorized Possession of Confidential Personal Information, Attempted Theft in the Second Degree, Identity Theft in the Third Degree, and Theft in the Third Degree. Kaniaupio allegedly used her position to steal a credit card containing $8,960.11 from an inmate's out-processing paperwork and withdrew $500 in cash before the card was deactivated.

Why this matters

Hawaii AG's explicit statement that public servants who abuse their position for personal financial gain will be prosecuted signals heightened enforcement attention on official misconduct by government employees with access to sensitive records or financial systems. Peer agencies and employees with similar access should review their internal controls.

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Published by Hawaii AG on ag.hawaii.gov . Detected, standardized, and enriched by GovPing. Review our methodology and editorial standards .

What changed

The Hawaii Department of the Attorney General filed nine criminal charges against Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation employee Julianne Kaniaupio for allegedly exploiting her official position to steal a credit card containing $8,960.11 from inmate out-processing paperwork and withdrawing $500 in cash before deactivation.

Public servants in Hawaii should treat this as a signal that abuse of official access for personal financial gain will result in criminal prosecution. Government agencies should review internal controls for employees with access to inmate records and financial information.

Penalties

Fraud (class B felony): up to 10 years in prison and a $20,000 fine; Official Misconduct, Credit Card Theft, Fraudulent Use of Credit Card, Unauthorized Possession of Confidential Personal Information, Attempted Theft in the Second Degree, Identity Theft in the Third Degree (class C felonies): up to 5 years in prison and a $10,000 fine each; Theft in the Third Degree (misdemeanor): up to 1 year in jail and a $2,000 fine

Archived snapshot

Apr 21, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

STATE OF HAWAIʻI KA MOKU ʻĀINA O HAWAIʻI

JOSH GREEN, M.D.

GOVERNOR

KE KIAʻĀINA

DEPARTMENT OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL

KA ʻOIHANA O KA LOIO KUHINA

ANNE LOPEZ

ATTORNEY GENERAL

LOIO KUHINA

DEPARTMENT OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL CHARGES DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AND REHABILITATION EMPLOYEE WITH FRAUD-, THEFT- RELATED CRIMES

News Release 2026-19 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE April 20, 2026 HONOLULU - Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (DCR) employee Julianne Kaniaupio was arrested on charges related to fraud and theft. On April 8, 2026, the Department of the Attorney General's Special Investigation and Prosecution Division (SIPD) charged Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (DCR) employee Julianne Kaniaupio with nine criminal charges for using her position to steal a credit card containing $8,960.11 from the out-processing paperwork of a Hālawa Correctional Facility inmate set for release and with the use of the credit card to withdraw $500.00 in cash before the card was deactivated. The investigation was conducted by the Department of Law Enforcement. Kaniaupio is charged with Fraud, two counts of Official Misconduct, Credit Card Theft, Fraudulent Use of Credit Card, Unauthorized Possession of Confidential Personal Information, Attempted Theft in the Second Degree, Identity Theft in the Third Degree, and Theft in the Third Degree. Fraud is a class B felony punishable by up to 10 years in prison and a $20,000 fine. Official Misconduct, Credit Card Theft, Fraudulent Use of a

Department of the Attorney General News Release 2026-19

Credit Card, Unauthorized Possession of Confidential Personal Information, Attempted Theft in the Second Degree, and Identity Theft in the Third Degree are class C felonies punishable by up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine. Theft in the Third Degree is a misdemeanor punishable by up to one year in jail and a $2,000 fine. "Public Servants are entrusted with significant responsibility and any abuse of that trust, especially for personal financial gain, will be investigated and prosecuted," said Attorney General Anne Lopez. "I want to acknowledge the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation for cooperating with the investigation and helping to address this misconduct. My department remains committed to protecting the integrity of our institutions and holding individuals accountable for criminal conduct." The case, State v Julianne Kaniaupio, 1CPC-26-0000464, is being prosecuted by SIPD Deputy Attorney General Kyle M. Mesa. Arraignment is scheduled for April 27, 2026, at 8:30 a.m. Criminal charges are only allegations; Kaniaupio is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. The public can report corruption, fraud and economic crime through the SIPD "Submit a Tip" website, located at https://ag.hawaii.gov/sipd/tips/. If there is an emergency or an immediate threat to life, please call 911. # # # Media contacts: Dave Day Special Assistant to the Attorney General Office: 808-586-1284 Email: david.d.day@hawaii.gov Web: http://ag.hawaii.gov Toni Schwartz Public Information Officer Hawai'i Department of the Attorney General Office: 808-586-1252 Cell: 808-379-9249 Email: Toni.E.Schwartz@hawaii.gov Web: http://ag.hawaii.gov

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
Hawaii AG
Filed
April 20th, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Branch
Executive
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive
Docket
1CPC-26-0000464

Who this affects

Applies to
Government agencies Criminal defendants
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Criminal prosecution Official misconduct Identity theft
Geographic scope
US-HI US-HI

Taxonomy

Primary area
Criminal Justice
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Law Enforcement Employment & Labor

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