An investigation is underway after officials found piles of unopened mail in Southern California this week.
Officials responded to a call about the dumped mail at around 8 a.m. on Sept. 4. The U.S. Postal Service (USPS) asked the police to deal with a situation about “possible stolen mail or whatever was dumped in an alleyway,” Hauptmann said.
A second call about mail that was allegedly dumped was made hours later. A business owner told police that they saw a similar incident in a store parking lot near the alley, Hauptmann added.
The USPS said it will not comment on the matter, suggesting that it is being investigated.
“The U.S. Postal Inspection Service is the law enforcement, crime prevention, and security arm of the Postal Service,” spokesperson Evelina Ramirez said in a statement to news outlets. “In order to preserve the integrity of their investigations and to prevent fundamental unfairness to the subjects of those investigations, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service does not comment on any ongoing investigations.”
USPS employees were not involved in the incident, said Omar Gonzalez, the Western Regional Coordinator for the American Postal Workers Union, according to CNN.
“We wanted to make sure it wasn’t a bargaining employee,” Gonzalez said. “We talked to the Glendale supervisor and the Glendale manager and asked from where the contractors would have received the bags. That’s when they responded, telling us the Union should not speak about it.”
Gonzalez said the Postal Inspectors Office and local police are investigating the incident.