Does EVERY Controlled Delivery include plans for arrest?
I was just told by someone that every controlled delivery planned by the US Post Office includes plans for arrest. Does anyone know if this is factually accurate??
(And, um, how can it be true? I feel like it would be wildly unruly and just impossible for every single suspicious package delivery situation to result in arrest.)
Answers:
I was a USPS city carrier for 6 years (1998 - 2004) and I've never heard anything like that.
edit: After reading the article posted by the user above me, I still maintain that I was never involved in any Postal Inspection Service activity. I heard several stories from tenured carriers who storied about certain circumstances in which they were directed by the PIS to notify them of suspicious activity. Only after suspicious activity was already reported, that is.
I would imagine that suspects of Federal agencies would be subjected to some sort of screening.
After 9/11 though, suspect parcels were handled a bit differently but we never went overboard with it.
http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1g1-1844...
http://www.martinsvillebulletin.com/arti...
Well, I tried to find more, but apparently they aren't advertising their methods so much. It makes sense.
These examples are much worse than what you unintentionally did (oops, assumed you were the same person who asked the other question). But controlled delivery suggests some type of control, does it not? And it may not have been the postman who tried to bring you the package.
i don't think theres enuff employees to control every package,but if it smells diff.or odd they might contact enforce law to ck. it out,the package has to stick out to them first<>IS<>
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