Hidden bunker, tunnel with 1,000 bikes found in California homeless camp

Officers from the Orange County Sheriff's Department and the Anaheim, Orange and Fountain Valley police departments have been clearing out homeless camps along the Santa Ana River trail.
Officers from the Orange County Sheriff's Department and the Anaheim, Orange and Fountain Valley police departments have been clearing out homeless camps along the Santa Ana River trail.

As Orange County, Calif., officials clear out homeless camps along the Santa Ana River, they are making some unexpected discoveries,

In one area, they found an underground bunker accessible from a wooden hatch camouflaged with dirt.

In another, more than 1,000 bicycles tucked in a separate tunnel were found.

The county began clearing more than 150 homeless people from the area Nov. 7 after months of complaints from nearby condominium residents about unsanitary conditions and other nuisances at the camp.

Lt. Jeff Puckett said the Sheriff's Department has made more than 260 arrests in the past several months in various camps along the river trail in connection with crimes such as robbery, assault and trespassing.

However, homeless advocates have contended the county is criminalizing homelessness and shuffling the camps' population around instead of solving the growing problem.

When public works crews arrived to clean up trash two weeks ago, they found the 1000 bicycles tucked into a tunnel along the concrete river bed in Santa Ana, just south of the river's Fairview Street overpass.

"I've been doing this job for 20 years, and even I was stunned by that one," Puckett said.

Workers dragged out the bikes and hauled them to a storage yard.

Puckett said the department likely will allow the public to look at the bikes at some point in an effort to reunite people with lost or stolen property.

Authorities said there were indications that someone was living in the area where the bikes were found, but they haven't identified the person or how and why the bikes were obtained.

Authorities said they don't know how many of the bikes might have been stolen.

"Common sense would usually dictate if you have 1,000 bikes in a tunnel, some of them could be stolen," Puckett said.

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