Question about customs seizure affecting shipments of lesser drugs after a long time

About five months ago I ordered a pretty hard drug (schedule II or greater) from the darknet and this was seized by customs. This caused another shipment of a much lesser drug (anti-estrogens from anabolshop) to be seized.

Here's the thing about the seizure: I used a fake name and didn't get a seizure letter for either shipment. My guess is that customs probably referenced social security numbers attached to the name, determined that no one at this address uses that name, and seized the shipment.

Lately I've wanted to order some stuff from alldaychemist that is currently either not scheduled or barely scheduled, but this has to go through customs.

A couple of dealers I talk to said that my house was probably marked.

Eyeballing it (since no one can say for sure), what is the relative risk in ordering, say, an anti-estrogen or anti-prolactin from a website like alldaychemist? Would this justify a raid of my home? Do they stop watching homes after a while?

My gut says it's probably no big deal, but I'd like to get a second opinion on this.

FOLLOWUP QUESTION: If my address is still fucked, would a UPS (not USPS) P.O. box be all right? Do they flag based on name or address? (And if name, then would they even think to flag me if it was shipped to a fake name?)


Comments


[3 Points] None:

They never stop watching. Your address is in a database. Databases are forever.

Do you think customs has never heard of ordering drugs under a fake name before? They know you live there. They know what you did.

Don't push your luck. Even if you don't get busted, there is zero chance of your shipment getting through.


[1 Points] auscokesupps:

Curious about this, and to see if similar applies to Australia... Posting to keep myself updated.


[1 Points] cautious_cumface:

It's unlikely your get anything more than theories and educated guesses. But it's safe to assume your address will be flagged, I'd guess anything going through customs will trigger something, no idea about domestic. Considering that we know of current large-scale investigations into DNM s I'd err on the side of caution.