Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would pull his credit report just in case. There are scams of signing up people for Medicaid amd sending incontinence supplies to them which Medicaid pays for. They might start ordering more expensive supplies.
No one is wearing panty liners for incontinence.
Wrong.....!!
Pads, sure. Panty liners, no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would pull his credit report just in case. There are scams of signing up people for Medicaid amd sending incontinence supplies to them which Medicaid pays for. They might start ordering more expensive supplies.
No one is wearing panty liners for incontinence.
Wrong.....!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would pull his credit report just in case. There are scams of signing up people for Medicaid amd sending incontinence supplies to them which Medicaid pays for. They might start ordering more expensive supplies.
No one is wearing panty liners for incontinence.
Anonymous wrote:I would pull his credit report just in case. There are scams of signing up people for Medicaid amd sending incontinence supplies to them which Medicaid pays for. They might start ordering more expensive supplies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you see/recall who has sent your son (normal) Amazon packages in the past? Grandparents, friends, etc? My guess is that someone accidentally selected your son as the recipient for an auto delivery when they set it up. It’s easy to do; I’ve had Amazon default to the last recipient on deliveries before.
ohhh that seems likely! panty liners are the type of thing someone might put on auto delivery. I think I would die of embarrassment!
But she said March and June. Who is going through that many pantyliners in a couple of months?
Someone who wears them daily. There are reasons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you see/recall who has sent your son (normal) Amazon packages in the past? Grandparents, friends, etc? My guess is that someone accidentally selected your son as the recipient for an auto delivery when they set it up. It’s easy to do; I’ve had Amazon default to the last recipient on deliveries before.
ohhh that seems likely! panty liners are the type of thing someone might put on auto delivery. I think I would die of embarrassment!
But she said March and June. Who is going through that many pantyliners in a couple of months?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you see/recall who has sent your son (normal) Amazon packages in the past? Grandparents, friends, etc? My guess is that someone accidentally selected your son as the recipient for an auto delivery when they set it up. It’s easy to do; I’ve had Amazon default to the last recipient on deliveries before.
ohhh that seems likely! panty liners are the type of thing someone might put on auto delivery. I think I would die of embarrassment!
But she said March and June. Who is going through that many pantyliners in a couple of months?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is funny. Come back and let us know when the mystery is solved.
I don't find it funny at all, and I'm not Op. This is extremely alarming, particularly if it's coming from an adult to a little boy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you see/recall who has sent your son (normal) Amazon packages in the past? Grandparents, friends, etc? My guess is that someone accidentally selected your son as the recipient for an auto delivery when they set it up. It’s easy to do; I’ve had Amazon default to the last recipient on deliveries before.
ohhh that seems likely! panty liners are the type of thing someone might put on auto delivery. I think I would die of embarrassment!
But she said March and June. Who is going through that many pantyliners in a couple of months?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Brushing scam. That's it.
How would they get the kid's name though. They usually get the property owner's name from property records. Kids aren't on property records.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you see/recall who has sent your son (normal) Amazon packages in the past? Grandparents, friends, etc? My guess is that someone accidentally selected your son as the recipient for an auto delivery when they set it up. It’s easy to do; I’ve had Amazon default to the last recipient on deliveries before.
ohhh that seems likely! panty liners are the type of thing someone might put on auto delivery. I think I would die of embarrassment!
But she said March and June. Who is going through that many pantyliners in a couple of months?