Hawaii law enforcement ask lawmakers for staff and money to crack down on illegal fireworks
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Hawaii authorities on Tuesday asked lawmakers for money to hire eight people and pay for a $2 million expansion of a forensic lab to crack down on the persistent rampant smuggling of illegal fireworks like those that killed four people and injured about 20 more at a Honolulu home on New Year’s Eve.
Jordan Lowe, the director of the state Department of Law Enforcement, outlined the funding request during a hearing before the House Finance Committee. Last week's deadly explosion highlighted the immense risks posed by illegal fireworks in Hawaii, putting a spotlight on the department's efforts to address contraband explosives.
Hawaii lawmakers will consider budget requests during their next legislative session due to begin on Jan. 15. The state already has an Illegal Fireworks Task Force that the department formed in 2023 together with other state, city and federal agencies. So far it has seized 227,000 pounds of fireworks and two people have pleaded no contest to felony indictments resulting from its work.
Lowe told lawmakers his department's contribution to the task force consists of two officers whose main job is handling narcotics enforcement. Whenever an operation is planned, the task force must pull personnel from the Honolulu Police Department, attorney general's office and other agencies.
“The problem with that is it’s really not sustainable,” Lowe said. He explained how after a seizure of 30,0000 pounds of fireworks, for example, officers must unload a shipping container holding the contraband, prepare an inventory list, reload the explosives into a container and then transport it to storage. Only then do they track down who bought and sold the shipment and determine whether they are able to prosecute the case.