08-15-2006, 01:38 AM
I bet it's *not* a national requirement to bring a Media Mail package unsealed.
All mail except First Class, Priority, and Express Overnight Mail, are subject to routine postal inspection at any time. This means anytime an employee is suspicious or if there is a routine, random inspection.
So the odds are that you can lie about the contents (tacit or overtly) and you probably won't get caught. Interesting that you don't mind a little fraud, as long as you won't get caught.
The other problem is that if somebody at the post office at the delivery end decides to check the contents and finds that you lied about the contents, the addressee will be assessed additional postage. Should he/she refuse to pay the Postage Due, the package would come back to you with not only the additional postage due, but the return postage as well.
It seems a lot of people have the same idea as you, cheating the post office to save money. Because of that, a lot of attention seems to be paid to Media Mail packages.
I've mailed two MM packages a while back. The clerks ask me (and others, I've noticed) what's in the box. If you answer incorrectly, they either use a different rate (Parcel Post) or have you open the package.
If you choose not to tell them (I heard a woman tell the clerk "I don't think that's any of your damn business." She was wrong, apparently.) you get a PP or Priority rate, your choice.
I suppose some clerks don't care and don't ask. If it was me, I'd watch the pupils-- if they contract, and the crook sticks to their story, the box would be inspected.
I'd check the usps.com site for a better definition of what is eligible for Media Mail, because "paper" in and of itself, does not qualify.
All mail except First Class, Priority, and Express Overnight Mail, are subject to routine postal inspection at any time. This means anytime an employee is suspicious or if there is a routine, random inspection.
So the odds are that you can lie about the contents (tacit or overtly) and you probably won't get caught. Interesting that you don't mind a little fraud, as long as you won't get caught.
The other problem is that if somebody at the post office at the delivery end decides to check the contents and finds that you lied about the contents, the addressee will be assessed additional postage. Should he/she refuse to pay the Postage Due, the package would come back to you with not only the additional postage due, but the return postage as well.
It seems a lot of people have the same idea as you, cheating the post office to save money. Because of that, a lot of attention seems to be paid to Media Mail packages.
I've mailed two MM packages a while back. The clerks ask me (and others, I've noticed) what's in the box. If you answer incorrectly, they either use a different rate (Parcel Post) or have you open the package.
If you choose not to tell them (I heard a woman tell the clerk "I don't think that's any of your damn business." She was wrong, apparently.) you get a PP or Priority rate, your choice.
I suppose some clerks don't care and don't ask. If it was me, I'd watch the pupils-- if they contract, and the crook sticks to their story, the box would be inspected.
I'd check the usps.com site for a better definition of what is eligible for Media Mail, because "paper" in and of itself, does not qualify.