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The DEA (Drug Enforcement Administration, the USPIS (United States Postal Inspection Service), and the DHS (Department of Homeland Security). These agencies work together to bring down people like you. They have unlimited resources, unlimited time, and are ruthless in their pursuit. You will get on their radar eventually - and when you are, they will work together to erase you from it. Before we get into the "fun stuff", you need to do research on those who seek to take your freedom away. The USPIS is generally going to be the beginning of all of this, so let's understand their work just a little better.
The USPIS are not "rent a cops". They are licensed to carry firearms and make arrests, and do so frequently. If you have not properly prepared one single package, it can be the smoking gun that will come back to bite you in the ass. Not only do they have forensic labs to lift fingerprints off any possible surface on the package, they have a very damning tool that they have made attempts to keep secret from the public. They have even redacted it from public documents.
The new version of the USPS Classified National Security Information Program handbook (AS-303) added a new 9 page section, which they don't want to disclose because they claim it "would disclose techniques and procedures for law enforcement investigations or prosecutions, or would disclose guidelines for law enforcement investigations or prosecutions if such disclosure could reasonably be expected to risk circumvention of the law" (5 USC 552(b)(7)(E))
Based on information gathererd by mail covers (You can thank Informed Delivery, too), the USPS has a map linking you to packages that have been received at your address. Do you reup from the same vendor, in the same city, in the same state? Even so much as two orders will be a causational link determining that you're in contact with that individual. What if they get busted? Clearly, if they're a supplier, they'll be using fake return addresses, but always real destinations (ie. you) - so if your name happens to be on one of those packs, you're going to have a hard time denying that you're not expecting anything when you just got the same pack last month and they have the evidence for it.
Speaking to that last point - the "I'm not expecting anything" routine that you commonly hear spouted on Dread among other places as ways to keep you safe - it doesn't work. When the USPIS has reached the point of an investigation that they're comfortable making you aware that there's an investigation on you, you're already fucked. You made a mistake somewhere, and they know that. In the event they *dont* tell you, and attempt to initiate a controlled delivery, *leaving the package at the door or refusing it does not work.* Do you really think they'd just say "Ah, shit, he beat us!" - no, multiple cases that you can find via PACER (and RECAP) specifically note that the defendant had left the package at the door for x hours while the police officers just chilled nearby. They're not letting that package out of their sight. You can write "RTS" on it, but they'll just go grab it and knock on your door.
Again, speaking on that last point, if the police knock on your door, NEVER open it unless they have a warrant. Simply opening a door can be interpreted as "inviting" an officer into your home. It's slimey, I know, but it happens.
So, with this information, how do we reliably source our product? Well, hopefully, offline. If you're buying and reshipping your product, you're opening a huge attack vector for law enforcement and I don't advise you continue down this route. If you're getting your product from an offline distributor, completely different story.
[Taken from a WIP textbook I'm putting together regarding highly guarded information on how the USPIS, DEA, and HSI investigate and prosecute vendors. Release date unknown, there's some information I don't think should be in the public and I'm wrestling with myself on releasing it or not]
The USPIS are not "rent a cops". They are licensed to carry firearms and make arrests, and do so frequently. If you have not properly prepared one single package, it can be the smoking gun that will come back to bite you in the ass. Not only do they have forensic labs to lift fingerprints off any possible surface on the package, they have a very damning tool that they have made attempts to keep secret from the public. They have even redacted it from public documents.
The new version of the USPS Classified National Security Information Program handbook (AS-303) added a new 9 page section, which they don't want to disclose because they claim it "would disclose techniques and procedures for law enforcement investigations or prosecutions, or would disclose guidelines for law enforcement investigations or prosecutions if such disclosure could reasonably be expected to risk circumvention of the law" (5 USC 552(b)(7)(E))
Based on information gathererd by mail covers (You can thank Informed Delivery, too), the USPS has a map linking you to packages that have been received at your address. Do you reup from the same vendor, in the same city, in the same state? Even so much as two orders will be a causational link determining that you're in contact with that individual. What if they get busted? Clearly, if they're a supplier, they'll be using fake return addresses, but always real destinations (ie. you) - so if your name happens to be on one of those packs, you're going to have a hard time denying that you're not expecting anything when you just got the same pack last month and they have the evidence for it.
Speaking to that last point - the "I'm not expecting anything" routine that you commonly hear spouted on Dread among other places as ways to keep you safe - it doesn't work. When the USPIS has reached the point of an investigation that they're comfortable making you aware that there's an investigation on you, you're already fucked. You made a mistake somewhere, and they know that. In the event they *dont* tell you, and attempt to initiate a controlled delivery, *leaving the package at the door or refusing it does not work.* Do you really think they'd just say "Ah, shit, he beat us!" - no, multiple cases that you can find via PACER (and RECAP) specifically note that the defendant had left the package at the door for x hours while the police officers just chilled nearby. They're not letting that package out of their sight. You can write "RTS" on it, but they'll just go grab it and knock on your door.
Again, speaking on that last point, if the police knock on your door, NEVER open it unless they have a warrant. Simply opening a door can be interpreted as "inviting" an officer into your home. It's slimey, I know, but it happens.
So, with this information, how do we reliably source our product? Well, hopefully, offline. If you're buying and reshipping your product, you're opening a huge attack vector for law enforcement and I don't advise you continue down this route. If you're getting your product from an offline distributor, completely different story.
[Taken from a WIP textbook I'm putting together regarding highly guarded information on how the USPIS, DEA, and HSI investigate and prosecute vendors. Release date unknown, there's some information I don't think should be in the public and I'm wrestling with myself on releasing it or not]