Would it be safe for me to sign for

I have read about people say "never sign". But almost all vendors require it? how does that makes sense..

Anyway would it be risky for me to order trams that require sign, compared to non-sign?

BR


Comments


[1 Points] vulve1:

Im not in US. So I guess it dosent make it more safe to not sign, but I have understood it like this: If you sign for a package, then you are confirming that you know whats in it, and then they have that on you.

Thats what I have read several times, but ofc If a package arrive at our home, most people would sign for it anyway even though they dont know what it is, people are curious.


[1 Points] vulve1:

So what do you suggest RosyPalm?


[1 Points] Vendor_BBMC:

I assumed you were in the US.

A bunch of teenage kids on here have worked themselves into a kind of mass hysteria that's making them too panicky and stupid to receive a letter. Even dead people can get mail without fucking it up.

I'm going to ask you where you're from. Please don't say the UK, or I'm going to be sooo fucking embarrassed.

You know how all your life you've bee3n getting letters and signing for things you bought online? Its a bit like that...

...in fact it's EXACTLY like that, you doughnut!

If its signed for, a) the postman can't steal it, or he will get sacked b) The vendor can offer escrow, because he can prove that he posted something. If it arrives, he can prove it. If it doesn't, you can prove it. c) In the UK, express mail is guaranteed to arrive before 1PM the day after posting it, and costs £6.40 (US$10). Its guaranteed up to £500, so its not going to get stolen.

If anyone wants to open it, its going to cost them £500 (US$778).

To answer your question:- dur! Of course you should sign for it. Or go for a cheapskate vendor who just sticks a stamp on it and hope that he actually sends it.

You never know whats in a letter, because its in an opaque privacy covering called an "envelope". If you refuse to sign for a letter, it goes to the return address which is fake. So it gets opened at the post office. The postman probably wouldn't know what to do if somebody refuses to sign, except be very pissed off and suspicious. He just carried it all the way to your house without stealing it because its signed for, and now he's got to return it to sender.

If you're not old enough to get a letter in the post without thinking too much and asking people how to do it, you're not old enough to buy drugs.

The police don't need to trick you into opening your door to sign for a letter or parcel. They just kick it down


[1 Points] meantocows:

Ive signed for tramadol on numerous occasions, ive even signed for it coming from fucking thailand. In no way shape or form do the police give a fuck about you ordering a couple hundred tramadol, think about the cost of that raid. On the other hand i wouldnt even consider signing for a single stamp bag of heroin.


[1 Points] vulve1:

Damn, easy now..

Isnt it obvious that I ask when I see all around this website that people claim that you should NEVER SIGN.


[1 Points] sunsetparkslope:

I was thinking of having it shipped to a UPS store. They have package acceptance for $4.95. Leave them your name, email address, and phone number and they will contact you when the package arrives. All the information you provide can be fake and they would not know.


[0 Points] Theeconomist1:

Are you in the US? Following advice is geared towards US, but while you will get varying thoughts, my belief is that signing or not signing won't be the thing that fries you. For one, simply taking possession is enough to equate to one another. But even taking possession won't mean you are fucked necessarily. People sign for packages all the time, nearly 100% of the time w/o knowing what you are signing for. That's an appropriate defense. Keep a clean house while you have packs in transit and don't have shit around that makes it look like you are dosing drugs. Often, cops will use taking possession as a precursor to a warrnt to search your home. If all the cops have is that you signed for a package, they probably won't score a conviction against you. And above all, shut the fuck up. People get themselves a conviction by talking.

Signing or not signing for a package won't be your ultimate downfall. Talking will be, even a denial. Don't say shit except to ask for an attorney and exercise your 5th amendment rights (in the US of course). People will talk all day bout not signing for shit - IMO this can be worse. From a probability perspective, I'd bet 90% of hte time them asking for a signature is benign and has nothing to do with anything nefarious. But you refuse a package, then that pack will get returned to sender, which will be a valid, but random, address. Some random guy will open the pack, with your name on it, and more than likely call the cops. Now you've guaranteed a visit from the cops - which again, isn't the end of your freedom, but you are in the same position that you initially feared.

And also, people worry about signing b/c its out of hte norm - most sellers do not require signatures so getting asked for one is out of hte ordinary and spooks people. You konw your vendor requires a signature, no big deal. At least you won't be spooked when asked for a signature! Your risk level is the same I believe. However, if its an international order, that's a different issue and your pack is more likely to be inspected. I don't do international though, so someone here with that level of experience can help you better. But the real reason people get spooked w/ signatures is bc its unexpected and usually not required. But this is, so shouldn't be a big deal.