Anonymous wrote:I’m not sure what a middle aged woman will do with a several motors and controllers for RC aircraft, so it’s not like it’s something she can wear/ use/ re-sell without knowing the niche market.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The neighbors could have called the police ON YOU claiming you were harassing her. True story, was told by an Amazon CS person to never pursue the misdelivered packages. In my case my neighbor stole my cutting board worth $12 or so.
Give me a break. Amazon CS did not tell you that.
OP contact the seller, hopefully it was insured and can be re-shipped with no loss to the seller.
Most police departments have an online reporting system for incidents like this. File there if you are inclined, but don’t call.
I swear she did! Not the one on their chat but the one on the phone. I told her I went over to the neighbor and they denied it and she told me to never do this. She did say it happened when the visitor became agitated but that it’s best to not even try.
I believe you, PP. The sellers like Amazon don't want to end up in the news as part of a headline like, "Woman shoots neighbor for trying to retrieve misdelivered Amazon package." I'm being serious. I'd bet that many companies advise buyers not to try to track down packages if there is even an iota of resistance by neighbors. Too dangerous, these days, and the seller's name would end up attached to any trouble, even though it's nothing to do with the seller.
Thank you for believing me! I was pretty shook then, tbh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would check the rest of the ring footage and watch for a package thief.
I have it on the camera her bringing it in approximately 2 hours after it was delivered.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, I don’t think it’s “theft” if a package is delivered to your own house, people.
Do you mean it's not "theft" to you if the neighbor kept what was delivered to her own door?
Do you live in a "finders keepers" mentality concerning items clearly labeled as belonging to other people? So you'd keep a package that was misdelivered to your house, PP?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The neighbors could have called the police ON YOU claiming you were harassing her. True story, was told by an Amazon CS person to never pursue the misdelivered packages. In my case my neighbor stole my cutting board worth $12 or so.
Give me a break. Amazon CS did not tell you that.
OP contact the seller, hopefully it was insured and can be re-shipped with no loss to the seller.
Most police departments have an online reporting system for incidents like this. File there if you are inclined, but don’t call.
I swear she did! Not the one on their chat but the one on the phone. I told her I went over to the neighbor and they denied it and she told me to never do this. She did say it happened when the visitor became agitated but that it’s best to not even try.
I believe you, PP. The sellers like Amazon don't want to end up in the news as part of a headline like, "Woman shoots neighbor for trying to retrieve misdelivered Amazon package." I'm being serious. I'd bet that many companies advise buyers not to try to track down packages if there is even an iota of resistance by neighbors. Too dangerous, these days, and the seller's name would end up attached to any trouble, even though it's nothing to do with the seller.
Anonymous wrote:Have any of you saying it's the seller's issue ever owned a small business? If the seller fulfills his/her duty, i.e. mails the package to the correct address, then it's the *carrier's* fault that it doesn't arrive. Recipients need to file a claim with the carrier, whether it's USPS/FedEx/UPS/etc. The seller did nothing wrong and should not have to suffer financial consequences.
Anonymous wrote:I love the drone ideas, they made me laugh. I don’t actually fly drones. Much nerdier, I make period correct WWII aircraft and then meet up with others way out in the country to fly them.
I’ve emailed the seller and shipper though I imagine I won’t hear until after the holidays.
I’m still fairly certain our neighbor has the package. It’s a weird shape and our camera can see onto her front walk. Oh well, I’m dropping it with her. Hope she enjoys the motors.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, I don’t think it’s “theft” if a package is delivered to your own house, people.