Author Topic: A short article on controlled deliveries by a lawyer  (Read 399 times)

llamabox

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A short article on controlled deliveries by a lawyer
« on: March 24, 2009, 03:02:26 AM »
This article was written by Rick Collins, a lawyer and former bodybuilder. He is talking about mail-order steroids, but I figured it can be assumed for other articles also.

Controlled Deliveries

By Rick Collins, J.D.

Controlled Deliveries

If investigators want to bust you for a juice package, their goal will be to get you to take possession of the package. There are two reasons: 1) once you accept a package of contraband, you can be arrested for possessing it; and 2) the feds will have generally obtained a warrant to search your house that cannot be executed until you accept the package.

That's where your signature comes in. Signing for the package removes any argument that you didn't accept it. Especially when it's supported by the undercover agents testimony about the conversation that took place. Are you Johnny Johnson? You said, Yes. Will you accept this package? You said, Of course! and looked really excited when you saw the return address from China.

Could accepting possession be proven in other ways? Absolutely. The issue is determined by looking at everything you did and said. In the conversation we just described, you said you were the person who intended to receive the package, and you explicitly stated that you would accept it. The absence of a signature won't magically protect you!

What if you refuse to sign, but try to accept the package verbally? A real courier wouldn't give it to you if a signature was required, but lets say this undercover agent courier would. Have you avoided an arrest and search? Of course not, because you've accepted the package! What's more, your cagey behavior will be used against you to prove your knowledge of the illegal contents of the package why else would you refuse to sign?

I've seen a number of cases where the target gets a funky feeling about the delivery guy and rejects the package. The undercover courier will then do everything possible to get the package into the targets hands, with or without a signature. It's the only way to execute the raid. In one desperate case, the courier blew his cover and flashed a badge. He summoned his partner, and the two asked to step inside to talk about the package. The target told them he had no idea what was in the package and that they most certainly could not come into his house. The agents said the package contained suspected drugs, and asked if they could open it. Do what you want, it's not my package. They opened it, and inside were 500 Anabol tablets. My mistake, one agent said. These are okay. You can import a personal use supply. Here, you can take them. Nice try. The target told the agent to stick the tabs where the sun don't shine and avoided an arrest and raid by the eight other agents skulking in wait just off the property.

Given the headaches presented by savvy suspects, law enforcers are taking a new approach: wiring the package to signal when it's opened. When someone opens a package, that's good evidence that he's the one who knowingly intended to possess it, right? It might even be stronger evidence than signing for it. The application for the search warrant will request authorization to execute the raid once the signal goes off. Several jurisdictions have begun using electronic signaling devices, typically AT-4's, to confirm that a target has opened his package. No part of the device is visible unless the package is opened. It makes no audible sound but transmits an alert signal to a remote receiver manned by the agents. These devices are perfect in cases where a signature request might spook the target. An AT-4 can make the difference between a botched operation and a valid arrest and raid. Be aware that it's likely the wave of the future.


Rick Collins, J.D., a veteran lawyer and former competitive bodybuilder, is the author of the groundbreaking new book LEGAL MUSCLE: Anabolics in America, available through this site. [© Rick Collins, 2003. All rights reserved. For informational purposes only, not to be construed as legal advice.]

Dr-Octagon

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Re: A short article on controlled deliveries by a lawyer
« Reply #1 on: April 07, 2009, 05:48:01 PM »
Wow, i havent read that article in years.  I'd imagine ole Mr Collins esq has been banking the last few years.

Tsathoggua

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Re: A short article on controlled deliveries by a lawyer
« Reply #2 on: October 22, 2010, 06:54:06 PM »
I bet a brief microwave exposure would fuck up a tracking device big time, anything not running on oldschool valve tubes instead of transistors in fact.

A very brief burst wouldn't harm many items of contraband nature, but sensitive electronics? bye bye motherfucker, see you in hell, you be there first to keep my seat warm.


Else just open it in a faraday cage, easy enough to build, rubber, sticks and wire mesh small enough for a given wavelength to be blocked.

Paranoid, hell yes, but if it keeps some jackbooted thug from putting a foot up your arse....
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micro

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Re: A short article on controlled deliveries by a lawyer
« Reply #3 on: October 28, 2010, 07:54:21 PM »
Or just slit open the side, or is it some sort of intelligent piece of gear that detects that too?
Or is it just light sensitive? And how would that microwaves play with the Al foil in the blister packs?
It might make the package catch fire.

Tsathoggua

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Re: A short article on controlled deliveries by a lawyer
« Reply #4 on: October 29, 2010, 01:16:58 AM »
No idea, just open it in a faraday cage, simply letting it try to signal, wire mesh isn't going to break the bank, and compared to a life sentence etc, more than worth the price, let that fucker chirp and squeal all it wants, and simply give it the old fashioned remedy. I.E blunt force trauma with a sizeable metal object.

Don't care how sophisticated that transmitter is, it still has to follow the laws of physics, and the laws of being smashed to fuck and dissolved in acid.
Nomen mihi Legio est, quia multi sumus

I'm hyperbolic, hypergolic, viral, chiral. So motherfucking twisted my laevo is on the right side.

psychexplorer

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Re: A short article on controlled deliveries by a lawyer
« Reply #5 on: January 20, 2011, 10:27:01 PM »
If the CD has been completed then the damage has already been done. Better to avoid CD situations in the first place and keep even a successful CD from leading to anything substantial by the basic common sense which has been reiterated for over a decade.

If there's nothing problematic in the mail and nothing problematic on the receiving premises then there is no problem. That has been the rule of thumb for years and has kept many people safe.

By keeping the package and destination clean, the CD now works in the recipient's favor. If the CD won't accomplish anything useful for LE, but they don't know it, they'll end up tipping their hand by making it in the first place. A CD which turns up nothing makes the recipient aware of their knowledge and heat.

That level of caution can't apply to the anabolic community because the nature of what they ship is illegal in and of itself. That purpose is vulnerable from the beginning, unlike situations in which the magic happens later and in a different postal code.

no1uno

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Re: A short article on controlled deliveries by a lawyer
« Reply #6 on: May 10, 2011, 06:08:17 AM »
Ok, I know someone who has probably been the recipient of more controlled deliveries than anyone in his Country:



Tip No.1

If a package does not arrive on time, do NOT ring up looking for the fucker - ASSUME it is has been intercepted, write it off & if it magically appears later, DO NOT ACCEPT IT

Tip No.2

Make damn sure you utilize very carefully packaged items, markings or specific wrapping that don't stand out to anyone but you. If it isn't wrapped that way, DO NOT ACCEPT IT

Tip No.3

If ANYTHING is unusual about the way the package is being delivered, such as reminder notices being delivered when they normally aren't, reminder notices being sent when there has been no attempt to deliver, final notices being sent for packages that have only just arrived, DO NOT ACCEPT IT

Tip No.4

If you open a package & it contains something other than what you expect it to contain, get a witness & ring Police saying a suspicious parcel has been delivered. It is not what you expected, thus you are not accepting whatever is in it (lack of knowledge, lack of acceptance may not stop you being arrested, but they are significant barriers to conviction).

Tip No.5

If your place of residence/business are not PRISTINE, DO NOT ACCEPT ANY PARCELS

Tip No.6

If Uniformed Police turn up at your address, banging on the door you must open it. You do not have to let them in. If they say "We have intercepted a parcel, we believe it contains ***** is it yours?" (Don't laugh, it does happen) The answer is "NO", not "ummmmm, maybe". My friend has seen people respond both ways.



In Australia Police are allowed to substitute the contents of parcels with lookalike materials. If the original & the intercepted materials are both powders and you accept you are gone. If the materials were differently labelled tablets and you have never signified that you were expecting the parcel, then acceptance is immaterial provided (a) the labelled tablets are legal to have & use (and you point out in your statement that you believed the parcel only contained legal tablets) and (b) that you make a point of not being dumb (ie. don't say you thought they were x or you are fucked). Based on case law, provided you did not ring up searching for said parcel and never admit you were expecting the same, you have a big get out of jail card. Once you can be proved to have EXPECTED the parcel then shit gets sticky. Acceptance is one thing, knowing acceptance is another, Court's will not allow Police to get anyone who gets an unexpected parcel with nothing more, that leaves open a doorway for anyone to get busted with no knowledge whatsoever and Judges don't want that to happen, because they or their family will be framed sooner or later. In order to establish the prosecution case all they need is:

(a) the parcel was EXPECTED & Accepted
(b) the parcel contained something that looked like a prohibited substance/drug

Big tip, don't ever look for lost parcels (if they are actually lost, they'll be opened by someone at some point - expect Police involvement).
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jon

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Re: A short article on controlled deliveries by a lawyer
« Reply #7 on: May 10, 2011, 10:22:11 PM »
actually in my country if the police bang on your door you do not have to open the door.
unless they have a warrant.
if you do open the door they will barge in and later say you gave them permission.
that happened to me once after that i never opened my door or even acknowlegded thier prescence.
make them kick it down, that way there is proof that there was forced entry and they did'nt get your permission.

tip #4 don't work possesion is 9/10ths of the law it does'nt matter if you knew or did'nt.
usually in a controlled delivery they will cuff you the minute you sign for the package.
« Last Edit: May 10, 2011, 10:26:02 PM by jon »

DopeBee

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Re: A short article on controlled deliveries by a lawyer
« Reply #8 on: May 15, 2011, 05:57:27 AM »
Yup do what I do and crank up the TV and take a long hot shower. Nowadays they don't even visit me no more. "Dopebee we know you're in there." LOL Keep knockin bitches! ;D

IMO the best advice is still don't get shit sent to your residence and always let a hot package sit for a week. When the cops set up a delivery they need everything to be done in a timely manner, they cannot sit and watch a package for weeks on end.

Assyl Fartrate

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Re: A short article on controlled deliveries by a lawyer
« Reply #9 on: January 30, 2012, 12:37:46 PM »
If they plant a transmitter in it, it might be fun to take it on a road trip.
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Re: A short article on controlled deliveries by a lawyer
« Reply #10 on: January 30, 2012, 08:18:52 PM »
As explained in my adventures of being busted (set up), the package was opened already on one end and the transmitter was therefore either already working or it was useless. Either way I destroyed it as soon as I saw it and led the SWAT team on a high speed chase down my neighborhood for a while. (they always seem to believe that I'm armed. lol)

Also, postal inspectors will be the ones to deliver it do your hands in the USA. Postal inspectors CAN NOT WEAR CARRIER UNIFORMS and cannot pose as a letter carrier in any way, shape or form. You can use this to your advantage in your query back to them.

And contrary to common belief/myth, USPS inspectors never needs a warrant to open your mail at any time. Certain rates of mail, like library/book rate/media mail/parcel post can be opened by any USPS employee, anywhere at any time, period.

First class mail is the only kind that has any sort of sanctity whatsoever and that has zero protection from inspectors in the USPS, no matter what the fuck you've been told.
« Last Edit: January 30, 2012, 08:20:48 PM by Dr. Tox »
Alimentary, dear Watson; I had a gut feeling.

tryl

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Re: A short article on controlled deliveries by a lawyer
« Reply #11 on: January 30, 2012, 10:31:42 PM »
in bulgaria, you'd get fucked if you actually go pick up that stuff.

doesn't arrive to your door, or whatever address you've given or figured out the scheme, forget about it.

generally, a government official, a cop most likely, will find a way to chlorinate the gene pool of the so-called bread of the country through someone.

nobody will care about dealing with all the paperwork to do with you as long as you forget about it.

i have come to actually witness this & figure out the fact that in conspiracy theories there is at least some sort of rational thought and logic.

though the postal system infrastructure, deliveries, mails, couriers and all that shit is something i have found nearly impossible to penetrate and figure out, what i have come to know, in the parts of europe i've inhabited, is it mostly all depends on low level clerks that mostly don't care cause they wouldn't earn more to be human scum in their line of work. can't say for sure, but that is what it looks like.

might as well just get a part time job in that sector or something & deliver your own enriched uranium.
« Last Edit: January 30, 2012, 10:43:09 PM by tryl »
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