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A high-tech search for dead bodies, guns and other criminal evidence dumped in MacArthur Park Lake was halted at the last minute on Monday morning, The California Post has learned.

Park rangers told the search’s organizers that they shut down the planned operation on Monday morning at the last minute after the intervention from LA City Councilwoman Eunisses Hernandez.


  A search for bodies, guns and other evidence believed to be submerged in MacArthur Park Lake was halted Monday. Ringo Chiu A search for bodies, guns and other evidence believed to be submerged in MacArthur Park Lake was halted Monday. Ringo Chiu

Her office did not immediately return requests for comment regarding the reasons for the last-minute shutdown.

The shutdown happened moments after The Post arrived on the scene and despite the search mission being planned for months.

A press release promoting the search, being conducting by Safe Cities USA, was distributed last week saying a Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV) would scour flood of the lake of bodies.

The operation was designed to scan the bottom of the murky lake for human remains, weapons and other possible criminal evidence long rumored to be submerged there. 


  Park rangers said they shut down the planned operation after intervention from Councilwoman Eunisses Hernandez. Los Angeles Times via Getty Images Park rangers said they shut down the planned operation after intervention from Councilwoman Eunisses Hernandez. Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

Local businessman John Alle, who owns multiple properties near MacArthur Park, organized the effort. He said it grew out of conversations he and his group, the Santa Monica Coalition, had with families whose loved ones vanished after spending time in and around the park.

Alle hired sonar and remotely operated vehicle specialist Robert Fallon, whose work typically involves scanning oceans, harbors, shipwrecks and municipal infrastructure in zero-visibility, high-risk environments.

Alle told The Post he has repeatedly tried to work with the councilwoman’s office to address the growing crisis at the park.


  Police vehicles were at LA’s MacArthur Park on January 26. Ringo Chiu for California Post Police vehicles were at LA’s MacArthur Park on January 26. Ringo Chiu for California Post

Ahead of Monday’s operation, he said he reached out to city officials and was told no special permit was required because the work posed no environmental disturbance — no one would enter the lake and nothing would be removed from it. Alle said he also reached out directly to Hernandez’s office but never received a response.

As recently as Sunday, Alle said, park rangers confirmed the crew had the green light.


  The body of a dead bird floats on the surface of LA’s filthy MacArthur Park Lake as the search was halted by rangers. Ringo Chiu for California Post The body of a dead bird floats on the surface of LA’s filthy MacArthur Park Lake as the search was halted by rangers. Ringo Chiu for California Post

That changed when Fallon’s team arrived Monday morning with their equipment staged and ready.

Alle said the lead park ranger told them the operation had to stop — first saying that Hernandez, a Democratic Socialists of America-backed lawmaker, had stepped in, then later saying her office had called.

Rangers threatened to arrest the crew if they didn’t halt the operation, Alle claimed, and ultimately issued the team a parking ticket as the project was shut down.

Follow The Post’s coverage of MacArthur Park

“People were bent over, shooting up, overdosing right next to us while we were being shut [down],” Alle told The Post. “I pointed it out and said, ‘Do you think that might be more important than what we’re trying to do?’ Because when they die, that’s going to be a bigger issue.”

The Post has spent more than a month reporting from MacArthur Park and has repeatedly witnessed the same bleak conditions described by Alle and Fallon: open drug use in broad daylight, people slumped unconscious on benches and grass, burned debris from overnight fires, needles scattered near walkways and playgrounds, and trash piling up along the lake’s edge.


  John Alle (L) and Robert Fallon at MacArthur Park on Monday. Ringo Chiu for California Post John Alle (L) and Robert Fallon at MacArthur Park on Monday. Ringo Chiu for California Post

  Rangers threatened to arrest the crew if they didn’t halt the operation. Ringo Chiu Rangers threatened to arrest the crew if they didn’t halt the operation. Ringo Chiu

Alle said the motivation behind the operation wasn’t political — it was humanitarian.

“Forty thousand people live within one square mile here,” he said. “Families. Kids. This used to be one of the most beautiful parks in Los Angeles. Now people are scared to walk through it.

“We wanted to show the city what’s really happening,” Alle said. “Above the water and below it.”

Fallon said his team regularly works in environments where visibility is zero, using sonar to identify submerged objects without disturbing them.

The same technology, he said, would have allowed crews to identify anything resting on the lake bottom — from wheelchairs and bikes to guns, knives or bodies — without putting a person in harm’s way.


  “This is one of the dirtiest bodies of water I’ve ever seen,” Fallon said. Ringo Chiu for California Post “This is one of the dirtiest bodies of water I’ve ever seen,” Fallon said. Ringo Chiu for California Post

“This is one of the dirtiest bodies of water I’ve ever seen,” Fallon said. “You’ve got layers of trash, debris, dead animals, human waste, needles — all of it. There’s constant dumping going on.

“Sonar would have picked up anything,” Fallon said. “Without putting a human being in that water.”

Alle also addressed the question many residents and investigators ask but rarely hear answered: How bodies could remain hidden in a shallow public lake for years.

“We kept asking one question — how are the bodies not surfacing?” Alle said. “And what we were told is they’re weighted down, tied to bicycles, wheelchairs, whatever they could find.”

During Monday’s visit, an ambulance arrived and transported a person who appeared to have overdosed while activity in the park continued around them.

The California Post reached out to Hernandez’s office for comment, including whether she or her staff directed park rangers to shut down the operation, but did not receive a response by publication time.

As of Monday afternoon, the sonar search had not been rescheduled.

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