Beware someone trying to trade a Direware in Glendale Arizona

Make a knife with a wooden handle and soak the handle in something that causes rash/the fingers to fall off. Alternatively, rig a knife and package with a tracker to find out where they go.
 
It might be easier for everyone involved to simply contact the Glendale, AZ post master and let them know someone is using that specific address to commit mail fraud (theft). If the home is no longer occupied, there is usually a mail stop placed on it. It would be pretty strange for an address that gets no mail to start receiving packages all of a sudden. The regular mail carrier would more than likely raise some questions about it. No utility bills, no solicitation mail, nothing but packages. Something is wrong.
 
Standard USPS instructions: deliver as addressed. True, a situation like this is unusual, and a good carrier would ask his postmaster about it.
 
My ex mother-in-law is 3blocks south. I know the area. Lots of biker-types, transient rentals, but some solid folks and families, also. It's also horse-property. Small world to see this hitting close to home.
 
Standard USPS instructions: deliver as addressed. True, a situation like this is unusual, and a good carrier would ask his postmaster about it.

One would think the everyday mail carrier would know the neighborhood well enough to know what houses are abandoned, vacant, crack houses or lived in. If there is a house on his route that he has not delivered mail to daily I would think he would know what was up.

Or maybe he is part and parcel to the thievery!!
 
Ira, I inspected delivery routes in New York City, and found in poor neighborhoods there were buildings abandoned by their landlords and ignored by the city. No electricity, water, locks, or visible tenants. But they got mail for people who squatted there and the carriers delivered mail as addressed rather than abandon these people altogether.

The letters had stamps, so we were being paid to serve them.
 
Ira, I inspected delivery routes in New York City, and found in poor neighborhoods there were buildings abandoned by their landlords and ignored by the city. No electricity, water, locks, or visible tenants. But they got mail for people who squatted there and the carriers delivered mail as addressed rather than abandon these people altogether.

The letters had stamps, so we were being paid to serve them.
 
Back
Top