Corruption claims, mailbox send Hawaii power couple to trial
HONOLULU — He was Honolulu’s Rolex-wearing police chief, an avid surfer who chatted with beat cops in Pidgin, Hawaii’s creole language. She was his deputy city prosecutor wife, who drove a Maserati and led an elite unit targeting career criminals while showering lunches on colleagues, friends and even the workers renovating her home.
For years, Louis and Katherine Kealoha were the city’s law enforcement power couple, enjoying widespread respect as Native Hawaiian role models who hailed from humble, blue-collar roots and rose to the top thanks to decades of hard work. They lived in a swanky house near an exclusive country club in the city’s Kahala neighbourhood, sometimes called Honolulu’s Beverly Hills.
Then the white mailbox perched on a pedestal in front of their house disappeared, triggering a drawn out disintegration of the couple’s reputation amid a twisted tale of allegations involving fraud, illegal drugs and an attempt to frame Katherine Kealoha’s uncle for stealing the mailbox.