- Was guilty of numerous crimes since early childhood, including smashing a neighbor's backyard incinerator with a claw hammer at 3, setting fire to a neighbor's garage at 4 and jamming a fork in a boy's eyeball at 15. By 17, Bunker had established himself as the Doogie Howser of the California penal system, parlaying a series of robberies, assaults and the stabbing of a prison guard into a stint in San Quentin (he was the youngest inmate there at the time).
- Was once convicted of a bank robbery.
- Was the basis for Jon Voight's character (Nate) in Heat (1995).
- He was a close friend of Michael Mann since the two worked on the screenplay adaptation of his first novel, "No Beast So Fierce". Bunker worked on Heat (1995)--as prison technical advisor--with Robert De Niro, Val Kilmer, Tom Sizemore, Kevin Gage and Dennis Haysbert. He taught them how to think, react and walk like ex-prison convicts. At one time, he announced that he and Mann are working closely on a TV series about gang life in prison, but the series was never produced.
- Straight Time (1978), based on his novel "No Beast So Fearce", won first Prize in the San Mateo Video Festival in 1979.
- As a child, he used to swim at Hearst Castle (while William Randolph Hearst was still alive).
- He met Danny Trejo in California's Folsom Prison in the late '70s. The two became close friends and since worked in several films together: Runaway Train (1985), Heat (1995), Animal Factory (2000).
- Was a close friend of late Mexican Mafia leader, Joe "Pegleg" Morgan.
- He was a friend of famous crime novelist James Ellroy. Ellroy praised "No Beast So Fierce" as "the most gritty and realistic novel about armed robbery". At one point Bunker signed for the screenplay adaptation of Ellroy's "Suicide Hill", the third part of the Lloyd Hopkins trilogy, for the French company Davisfilm. The film was never produced.
- He had a son, Brendan (born 1994), with his ex-wife, Jennifer.
- At one time, he was on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted List.
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