Advertisement

Found Items Give New Meaning to ‘Junk Mail’

Share
TIMES STAFF WRITER

To the person who recently dropped a frying pan in the mailbox, the postal service is awaiting your call. Ditto for the two cans of horse hoof polish, the pair of wooden drumsticks, the gold Elgin watch, the silver shower curtain hooks, the shopping bag full of Asian food, the dirty tennis shoes and the plastic baby bottle packed with little white jelly beans.

They are among the thousands of unclaimed items being kept in a storage room at the Santa Ana post office until postal workers find their owners or get tired of looking, whichever comes first.

“Don’t ask me how they get here,” said Carol K. Samaniego, manager of the Santa Ana Processing Center’s consumer affairs department. “Just about the time you think you’ve seen it all, you see something new.”

Advertisement

Similar stories are told at other postal centers in Southern California: An artificial eyeball turned up at the Van Nuys post office; bank deposits were inadvertently dropped into an Oxnard box; and guns and animals--including cats and snakes--regularly surprise carriers opening mailboxes in Los Angeles and Long Beach.

Among the hundreds of items that pass through Samaniego’s office each week from Orange County and portions of Los Angeles County, the two most common are photographs and keys. Like almost everything else that ends up in her care, she said, they probably were dropped in a collection box by mistake, sent in packages that broke open, or were deposited by people who, unwittingly or maliciously, confused mailboxes with trash bins.

Whatever the reason, she says, unaddressed items dropped into mailboxes remain, by federal law, part of the general mail stream until sorters at the post office set them aside. If you drop something in the mailbox by mistake, your postman can’t just hand it back to you. Eventually the stuff ends up in the consumer affairs department, where nine staffers try to find out to whom it belongs.

If an item contains a name or phone number, or any sort of identification, the owner is contacted. Things like bank deposits, DMV registration materials or real estate documents are returned to the appropriate agencies. Cell phones and beepers are left on in hopes the owner will call. “One young visitor from Japan,” Samaniego recalled, “lost his cell phone at Disneyland and somebody dropped it in a mailbox. He called us on his phone and we were able to return it to him.”

Items valued at more than $10 that remain unclaimed for 30 days are sent to a postal recovery center in San Francisco, where they are kept for another three to six months before being sold, often on EBay. All other items remain at the local post office for a year before being shredded or melted down.

That’s obviously not possible with everything. Samaniego remembers, for instance, a bowling ball and a cake that ended up in the mail. Other unusual items have included false teeth, hearing aids, eyeglasses, garage door openers, license plates, a glass bong (“nobody claimed that one,” she says) and a wedding ring with an attached note saying, ‘I don’t love you anymore, so you can have this back.’ ”

Advertisement

Bank deposits, cash and checks are frequently tossed into the boxes by mistake, said Oxnard distribution operations manager Hubert Wells.

Other finds over the past year have included wallets--minus the cash--presumably ditched by purse-snatchers, and key rings, which Wells said can slip off people’s fingers as they’re dropping their mail into the boxes. A few necklaces also have been found--as well as the occasional beer bottle or fast-food wrapper.

Wells said the processing center in Oxnard typically receives one or two calls a week regarding an item improperly dropped into a mailbox.

“If we can identify the party we try to return it via the mail or we give them a call and they can pick it up,” he said.

Samaniego lives for the success stories, those all-too-rare instances in which she can hand something back to someone who never expected to see it again. She recalls, for instance, the elderly Orange County resident who thought that her six $10,000 savings bonds were in a safe deposit box when, in fact, she’d inadvertently deposited them in the mail. Or the young secretary whose job probably was saved because Samaniego recovered the payroll checks she’d mistakenly dropped in a mail collection box before her boss discovered them missing.

“I love it” when something like that happens, Samaniego says. “It’s nice to see the smile on a person’s face when you return something to them.”

Advertisement

Most Ventura County residents trying to recover something dropped in a mailbox may call 988-5635. Thousand Oaks residents should call (661) 775-7720.

*

Times staff writers Margaret Talev, Hang Nguyen and Irene Garcia contributed to this story.

Advertisement