Legal concerns if powder delivered to wrong address?

Calm Logic

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What I wonder about every single day is what happens when USPS/FedEx/UPS delivers to the wrong address, and someone opens the package and sees a bunch of white powder.

Obviously not anything usually, but it makes me wonder if any of these wrong addresses call the authorities. I know one can always say they never ordered anything, but still.
 
For GLPs, Google Gemini's answer is as comforting as a warm blanket on a snowy day:

Google Gemini said:
The authorities (likely the Postal Inspection Service and/or DEA) would use the information on the package (the sender and recipient addresses) to track down the person who ordered the drug. At that point, the outcome would likely be the same as if the package had been intercepted before delivery: a notice of seizure and a stern warning. The investigation would be aimed at the sender and the illegal supply chain, not at the end consumer. However, the consumer would now be on the radar of law enforcement, which could increase the likelihood of future monitoring.

....but if the substance tests as HGH:

Google Gemini said:
The discovery of HGH in a misdelivered package would likely lead to a full-scale federal investigation, with the person who ordered it facing potential felony charges and significant prison time.
 
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For GLPs, Google Gemini's answer is as comforting as a warm blanket on a snowy day:

....but if the substance tests as HGH:
It seems like Gemini is having a bit of a hallucination, perhaps relying a little to heavily on CSI and such for its info. 🤪

Full-scale federal investigations of individual consumers over their online shopping habits for small personal-use quantities are pretty rare, even for many sch. 1 or 2 substances. If anything is going to happen, it's usually something they'll hand off to local cops.

Even if an investigation is started, there is still the question of what if any testing might ever be done. Most local (and even state) law enforcement usually don't have the resources available to dedicate to extensively analyzing a small number of vials unless there are other factors contributing to a (probably already ongoing) bigger investigation. I suspect most likely when rapid field tests with the various swabs and reagents they keep handy to ID the "usual" substances come up negative they're just gonna drop it and move on.
 
What I wonder about every single day is what happens when USPS/FedEx/UPS delivers to the wrong address, and someone opens the package and sees a bunch of white powder.

Obviously not anything usually, but it makes me wonder if any of these wrong addresses call the authorities. I know one can always say they never ordered anything, but still.
Whatever the surhorities might test it fue would not include GLP1.
 
I had a reta package lost in the last mile of delivery. Probably to the wrong address. I was hoping for it to show up one day but it never did.
 
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