Denying post in Malaysia

Hi there

In Malaysia, can one successfully deny knowledge of incoming post?

If, for example, a package contained an illegal substance and was caught by customs, would it be possible to deny knowledge of the package and contents, or do the authorities in the country not care?

I'm looking for folks with first- or second- hand knowledge here. Having posted the same at /r/legaladvice and gotten a lot of holier-than-thou noise in return, I think it's best to point that out from the start.


Comments


[6 Points] autophiller:

In light of recent events, I doubt the cargo plane will make it there.


[2 Points] pinkprincess1:

It depends on your laws and how your system works.

If you have some sort of public record like a telephone directory or electrol register which anyone has access to, then your address is public knowledge and you have no control over who sends you things.

It's ordering that you need to make sure you can deny, which of course you can as you will be behind TOR.

Be careful if you are actively tracking packages though. I think people should be more careful with tracking numbers than they actually are, but it just seems to be me that thinks so, so it's probably just my paranoia.