Explosive Enforcement Unit is proposed to combat illegal fireworks

2025 January 1 WDA - Honolulu Star-Advertiser photo by George F. Lee / GLEE@STARADVERTISER.COM llegal fireworks lit up Chinatown and Honolulu Harbor on Wednesday, Jan. 1, 2025.

JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO@STARADVERTISER.COM

Damage from a New Year’s fireworks explosion was visible Thursday on a house on Keaka Drive.

JAMM AQUINO / JAQUINO@STARADVERTISER.COM

A child’s skateboard was seen Thursday near a bucket filled with flowers in the driveway at the house on Keaka Drive where a New Year’s fireworks explosion took place.

GEORGE F. LEE / JAN. 1

Illegal fireworks light up the sky in the Liliha area.

The state Department of Law Enforcement plans to take action in tackling the ongoing issue of illegal fireworks by proposing the creation of an Explosive Enforcement Unit under the Illegal Fireworks Task Force during the upcoming legislative session.

DLE has been taking a three-pronged approach to address illegal fireworks: The first step focuses on stopping the importation of illegal fireworks through interdiction efforts; the second step targets distributors, particularly those selling illegal fireworks to the public; and finally, the department is working to educate the public on the dangers of setting off illegal fireworks and the importance of complying with regulations and the law.

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One method to achieve this is promoting voluntary compliance by enforcing the laws, such as issuing citations when illegal fireworks are observed.

The move comes following a deadly New Year’s Eve fireworks explosion in Aliamanu in Honolulu, which killed four people and injured about 24 others. A 3-year-old boy was among the fatalities from a blast occurring on Keaka Drive when illegal fireworks ignited in a massive explosion.

Two women died at the scene of the explosion, while a third woman died at a hospital Jan. 1.

The 3-year-old boy succumbed to his injuries at a hospital at 1:30 a.m. Monday.

A fifth fatality, a 20-year-old man, occurred in a separate incident in Kalihi, Oahu.

The proposed Explosive Enforcement Unit aims to address the dangers and disruptions caused by illegal fireworks by focusing on their use, sale and distribution while enhancing public safety through enforcement and education.

The unit would enforce laws related to explosives and fireworks, monitor their use, investigate incidents, safely detonate hazardous devices and interdict illegal shipments. It also would seize illegal fireworks, track supply chains and handle other enforcement responsibilities.

DLE Director Jordan Lowe suggested that increasing staff to patrol and investigate would allow the task force to conduct more operations and help make communities safer.

From Dec. 1 to Thursday, fireworks-­related enforcement in 2024 included one adult arrest, four adult citations, two juvenile arrests and one juvenile citation. In 2023 there were six adult arrests, eight adult citations, no juvenile arrests and one juvenile citation.

The numbers for 2022 included three adult arrests, 19 citations and one juvenile citation with no arrests; in 2021, adult arrests remained at three, with 52 citations, while juvenile cases saw no arrests and one citation; in 2020 there were four adult arrests, 61 citations, no juvenile arrests and five citations.

“What has happened so far, since the July 4 holiday last year to this past New Year’s, is that we have cited 14 or more individuals for setting off illegal fireworks,” Lowe said. “So, you have to understand the difficulty of doing this, conducting these operations, because they are very, very labor­-intensive. And it’s not a matter of seeing a firework go off two blocks away, and then when you get there, everybody’s gone. It’s a matter of conducting surveillance in high-frequency areas and being able to gather the necessary evidence to cite these individuals.”

Conducting surveillance in high-frequency areas and gathering enough evidence allows law enforcement officers to cite people for a misdemeanor violation. However, prosecution goes much further, requiring many more elements and much stronger evidence.

“When you’re going to step into a court of law and actually prove someone guilty, you’re held to a higher standard than you and I looking out the kitchen window and see fireworks,” Lowe said.

Lowe said the department is investigating the Keaka Drive fireworks explosion, and once the investigation is complete, any identified felony violations will lead to prosecution and arrests.

If the case falls under state jurisdiction, it will be handled locally, while federal charges could apply depending on the circumstances.

He also stated that distributing, possessing or manufacturing illegal fireworks is considered a felony, with the severity of the offense determined by specific quantities and circumstances.

The usual process involves seizing the fireworks once they are determined to be contraband.

After that, standard evidentiary procedures are followed to preserve the evidence and maintain the chain of custody for prosecution.

The seized fireworks are investigated and presented to the appropriate prosecuting authority, either the state Attorney General’s Office or the City and County prosecutor’s office.

To protect the integrity of its investigatory process, the Department of the Attorney General said it could not comment on the existence or status of specific investigations or potential pending cases.

“This tragedy impacts us all,” Attorney General Anne Lopez told the Honolulu Star-Advertiser in an email. “The Governor has asked for my office to assist with review of current fireworks-related laws. We are in the very beginning stages of this process. We will release the final product when it is complete.”

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