
wordsonscreen
Peanuts aren't nuts! They're seeds!
- Jan 21, 2021
- 728
:( Fuck. I see. It hurt to know you are hurting!! Okay, we can sort this. I gotchu.Ah, that makes a lot of sense! I've heard that A often used private couriers to deliver the packages so it's likely C would too!
How exactly would the authorities have proof of the individual in question opening it though? Fingerprints? Wouldn't the person get fingerprints on it just from being handed the package? Do you mean if they were to open it right in front of the delivery guy? Would plausible deniability not count in that instance even if the person genuinely did not know what was inside? If that were the case you'd think that a lot more innocent people would be framed by their enemies intentionally sending illicit substances to their houses.
My Dad is incredibly meddlesome to a fault & so he'd be sure to dig right into any package we receive soon after signing for it. He'd likely wait until after the delivery guy had left, though. The main reason I'm fretting over this is that the nature of my father's employment means he could get fired just for ME having looked at the DarkNet (if there were any proof, that is). I don't know if he's simply fear-mongering, but he stresses that any illegal activity whatsoever that could be traced directly to this household would cost him his job.
It would probably be easy for the cops to conclude that I was the one that ordered it, what with there being existing evidence of me having been sectioned last year & being all-around suicidal. I just don't know if my dad's work would catch wind of the investigation and automatically fire him because of it.
I hate that my CTB would potentially implicate my family to such a degree. I just can't bear being physically tormented by my disease any longer. My body acts as an instrument of torture.
How exactly would the authorities have proof of the individual in question opening it though?
2 levels to it- Seeing anybody receive the package
Then open it
Fingerprints? Wouldn't the person get fingerprints on it just from being handed the package?
Unavoidable
Do you mean if they were to open it right in front of the delivery guy?
Yes
Would plausible deniability not count in that instance even if the person genuinely did not know what was inside?
Reality and laws are totally different things..
If that were the case you'd think that a lot more innocent people would be framed by their enemies intentionally sending illicit substances to their houses.
It is rare because why spend money to send someone free drugs when there are easier ways to ruin people's lives.
It sounds like your dad will sign for it, if it needs to be signed for. Or he will open it at least.
In that case look into PO box options or the abandoned house options?