I think I've found the perfect drop address. What do you guys think about it ?

So recently I've discovered that one of my friends lives in an apartment in which there's only one mailbox shared for everyone living in the building and there's no doorman or concierge whatsoever... With that in mind I was wondering what you guys think about using his address as a drop ? All I have to do is obviously warn him (which he already accepted) and use a fake name. If something happens and LE intercept the package there would be no way to blame anyone... Not me, not my friend... I don't know, I just think there's no possible way of things going down...


Comments


[19 Points] Rolling_Stonedd:

Maybe I'm just stupid but how does an apartment building "share" a mailbox?


[12 Points] DANDANtheHATman:

Fake names are always a terrible idea IMO.


[11 Points] None:

If you use a fake name be prepared to not have it delivered and sent back to the vender. They might deliver it, might not, it's a risk.


[8 Points] dnmfuckface:

You already fucked up by telling your friend about it.


[9 Points] Underthearchway:

Your package gets stopped. Your friend gets caught picking it up. Rolls you over taking time in the slam. You get fucked.

Your package gets stopped. You get caught picking it up. You get fucked.

No excuses when your caught picking mail with someone else's name on it.

That ain't opsec bro.


[6 Points] blackhand25:

Fake names are generally not recommended. The real question, though, is how does the "shared mailbox" work? That doesn't make a whole lot of sense to me. Is it just an area for the postal workers to place packages too large for the boxes?


[3 Points] sanborg:

Just saying, the point of a drop is an address that is in no way related to you, so I personally wouldn't use that drop.


[3 Points] AndThenHeSays4:

I think it's a bad idea like other people have said. Package could get returned, your friend could get popped and roll on you, etc.

You also couldn't use anyone else's name because they might pick up your pack. Lose, lose.


[3 Points] None:

The short is your chances of beating a CD are not great. LE would do their homework, and just wait for someone to accept the package. Otherwise sounds like a great drop, idiots here don't realize that new people stay at new places, and fake names are fine to use, but suspicious to the mail man in some situations, not this one.


[2 Points] ShulginsCat:

I guess this could work, but wouldn't you need an apartment number?


[1 Points] smokecrackalldaylong:

you can use the reverse white pages and see what names are associated with that address. Some may have moved. mail forwarding is limited to a certain time period, like a month to 6 months. Also you could just call a bvunch of companies asking for coupons/samples with this new name so it gets associated with that address. There are spam sites that you can even just input your address


[1 Points] Kazaa99:

If its a dorm room/college address where all mail gets dropped in a box and each resident just picks up his own, then you will probably receive it most of the time, if not all. But if something gets seized, and LE does check it out, they will probably ask all the residents about this (most of the time they has to do something, as people don't like the idea of cops not doing everything they can in this "war on drugs"). And if the rest of the residents doesn't mind cops, they will probably be very nice and tell them if that person lives there and how many similar letters they have seen, or if they have seen somebody pick up mail who doesn't live there.

So your buddy should also then be good at talking to the cops and know how to tell them that he does not know anything about that person and these letters. If he gets scared and cops pick that up, they will easily see that something is wrong.


[1 Points] None:

Its no different then u sending it to ur house stupidly with a diff name


[1 Points] None:

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[1 Points] None:

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[0 Points] Throwaway4fake:

College apartment? You'll be fine. Those addresses aren't registered in any names since they change yearly and the mailman won't know if the person actually lives there or not.