Hypothetical Scenario: Party A agrees to send package to Party B via USPS with DCN. Party A puts a package together, ships via USPS with DCN. USPS reports package delivered. Party B reports package never received.
What just happened? Was the package stolen off Party B's property? Possible. Did Party B actually receive it but deny receiving it? Possible. But recently, it occurred to me that a third option was possible. Let me know what you think of this: Party A puts together a dummy package. Could be anything, a used paperback, some Jehova's Witnesses pamphlets, whatever. Party A then proceeds to purposely mis-address the package. For example, instead of 2768 Street Lane, it goes to 2624 Street Lane. Far enough so that casual conversation with immediate neighbors would not turn up any clues. Close enough so that the same ZIP code is used. The package would be innocuous and worthless enough that the occupants at 2624 Street Lane would simply dump it without a second thought.
What do you think? Plausible? Feasible? How would one guard against such a maneuver? What clues might one look for?
Wilkey
What just happened? Was the package stolen off Party B's property? Possible. Did Party B actually receive it but deny receiving it? Possible. But recently, it occurred to me that a third option was possible. Let me know what you think of this: Party A puts together a dummy package. Could be anything, a used paperback, some Jehova's Witnesses pamphlets, whatever. Party A then proceeds to purposely mis-address the package. For example, instead of 2768 Street Lane, it goes to 2624 Street Lane. Far enough so that casual conversation with immediate neighbors would not turn up any clues. Close enough so that the same ZIP code is used. The package would be innocuous and worthless enough that the occupants at 2624 Street Lane would simply dump it without a second thought.
What do you think? Plausible? Feasible? How would one guard against such a maneuver? What clues might one look for?
Wilkey