IJesusChrist
Greenlighter
- Joined
- Jan 4, 2013
- Messages
- 1
Recently someone had shipped some california MJ to another state through UPS. The person was required to fill out much information before sending including name and so forth. It apparently made it to the destination state but;
A call was received saying the package was given to the wrong address. A reply was given that it wasn't his package, and had no idea about it.
Two more calls were made to the phone of the sender, both saying the same thing, and the sender asked not to be contacted again - and was called again.
They said they had shipped it to "9910 Example St" when the intended address was "9901 Example st".
Thinking perhaps ignoring this it would subside a peculiar message was given on the correct receiving address.
It was apparently written by the wrong shipping address person - the "9910" address - and signed, and dated, and it all checks out on Yellow Pages that 9910 actually exists, and that the person that wrote this letter actually lives there. The note says "I have received a package and stopped by many times and no one has answered. I want to return the package to the rightful owner, or ship it back to California."
SO:
1) The amount of MJ was very minimal, nothing to be worried about as far as that goes, so is this person a bit too paranoid, should they just ask for the package to be dropped off in the porch?
2) Is this some kind of ridiculously orchestrated entrapment? Has anyone heard of this? I mean this lady that wrote this note would have to be willingly cooperating with the police for gram-quantity amounts of MJ. Is this unheard of? Could they be this desperate to get someone?
Danka in advance.
A call was received saying the package was given to the wrong address. A reply was given that it wasn't his package, and had no idea about it.
Two more calls were made to the phone of the sender, both saying the same thing, and the sender asked not to be contacted again - and was called again.
They said they had shipped it to "9910 Example St" when the intended address was "9901 Example st".
Thinking perhaps ignoring this it would subside a peculiar message was given on the correct receiving address.
It was apparently written by the wrong shipping address person - the "9910" address - and signed, and dated, and it all checks out on Yellow Pages that 9910 actually exists, and that the person that wrote this letter actually lives there. The note says "I have received a package and stopped by many times and no one has answered. I want to return the package to the rightful owner, or ship it back to California."
SO:
1) The amount of MJ was very minimal, nothing to be worried about as far as that goes, so is this person a bit too paranoid, should they just ask for the package to be dropped off in the porch?
2) Is this some kind of ridiculously orchestrated entrapment? Has anyone heard of this? I mean this lady that wrote this note would have to be willingly cooperating with the police for gram-quantity amounts of MJ. Is this unheard of? Could they be this desperate to get someone?
Danka in advance.
