Author Topic: While Geo Allen was praying to the confedacy , hating blacks and draft dodging  (Read 11079 times)

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Plane

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Anyone that doubts a statement can easily look it up.

So much for debate, which usually requires a person to provide sources for his / her claims.

Guess if we're not gonna worry about the truth, this area will just become a flamefest.


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Oh no!
Who would want that?


http://www.usps.com/postalinspectors/


Mailbox Vandalism
When a customer’s mailbox is vandalized, the local police department is
often the first, and sometimes the only, law enforcement agency to whom
the event is reported. However, mailboxes are protected by federal law (18
USC 1705) and it is a crime to vandalize them (and to injure, deface, or
destroy any mail deposited in them). Therefore, any act of mailbox
vandalism should be reported to the Postal Inspection Service.
The Postal Inspection Service realizes that local police departments may
be involved in criminal investigations of a more serious nature and are not
able to assist in locating and apprehending mailbox vandals. The
perpetrators are often not identified in this type of crime.
Postal Inspectors do not have the resources to investigate every report of
mailbox vandalism or to conduct surveillances on Postal Service delivery
routes that have a mailbox vandalism problem. However, the Postal
Inspection Service will attempt to investigate mailbox vandalism when large
numbers of boxes are damaged or destroyed and will investigate when
there is evidence of tampering, rifling, or theft of mail from the vandalized
boxes.
Rural mailboxes are especially vulnerable to vandalism because they are
usually isolated, located on public thoroughfares, and frequently not visible
to mailbox owners from their homes. Non-rural residential mailboxes are
vandalized to a lesser degree. Teenagers are often responsible.