I get packs of coupons all the time addressed to "The valuable customer at 742 evergreen terrace..."
Has anybody had any success getting a package shipped to "The valuable customer at"
I get packs of coupons all the time addressed to "The valuable customer at 742 evergreen terrace..."
[15 Points] GrandWizardsLair:
[5 Points] None:
I would strongly advise against it. That's always always bulk rate mail and would raise eyebrows if some company sent a first class or priority package.
[2 Points] samwhiskey:
No
[2 Points] drpnit:
Might as well have them send it to your real name. That way, at least, you could claim someone is trying to frame you. Doing it your way only makes it obvious, if caught, that you were the one ordering.
The Grand Wizard gets packs of drugs all the time addressed to "The Grand Wizard's Real Name at 123 Grand Wizard's Lair Lane..." This system works splendidly. In several years of darknet marketing the Wiz has only lost a couple of packages to postal error or prying customs agents. Compare and contrast the Grand Wizard's experience with the poor saps who are always complaining about how their packages to Not My Real Name at 324 Someone Else's Address went astray.
Seriously, why do people insist on playing stupid address tricks? Does anybody really think that will make any difference in a situation where postal inspectors are involved? If anything, it makes your package more suspicious. ("I always deliver mail to Dick Hurt, who's this 'Rick Hertz' fellow? And why is he getting junk mail sent priority?") And it certainly increases chances of your package going astray.
The Grand Wizard has no experience dealing with large shipments of highly scheduled substances: he will step aside and let those who regularly sling kilos of coke talk about their best safety practices. But for personal use buyers this stuff is not just unnecessary, it's actively hazardous.