Just a random thought

Okay so lots of large vendors are aware that some of their packs are profiled. If you were to send packs that were empty to people you knew around the country that were clean. Wouldn't that make it harder to track real packs with multiple decoys out there.

It would cut into profits but any one who know how to hustle knows it not about the amount of profit it about moving enough to where it doesn't matter.

Maybe I'm to high but just crossed my mind since decoys are one of the best ways to do drug drops and exchanges in real life drug dealing. We used to take the bus with huge drops and all get off at different stops and out of 4 guys only one was the real bag man.


Comments


[7 Points] anonish9:

Or just switch up packaging? So much easier


[6 Points] ttrravis:

problem is they probably dont care as much as we do when the drugs are intercepted. Over the last year, 3 or 4 outta of every 10 international havent arrived...which are mostly FE. Refunds are rare, and re-ships arriving are rare too. BUT definitely wish big vendors would mix it up, take on the challenge with the customs etc. But more often than not they just shut up shop. once their profiled the funs over. I recommend setting up numerous secondary feeder locations. Investing in UAVs utilizing GNSS.we could then provide GPS coords for the drop rather than postal addresses... Or.....you need an agent in the destination country....or close to..then these bigger vendors only send once a week to the agent who continually travels to locations close but off the radar to avoid worded up profiled parcel officers .then the agent forwards on the parcels...maxweĺl smart style


[3 Points] None:

I may be confused, are you the 16 year old?


[3 Points] blackhand25:

The problem with that is it assumes that package profiling isn't done automatically. Largely it is. The USPS photographs, documents, records, and profiles every piece of mail that goes through its system. Allegedly the profile data is only kept for 60-120 days, but I wouldn't doubt it that number is vastly underestimated.

When there's a database that can see dozens of identically prepared packages, and determines that 80% of them searched have contained drugs, it doesn't really matter how many decoys you sent out. If you use the same packaging, all it takes is one intercepted package to put your entire customer base at risk.