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Returning to US with Potentially Strange Package

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Old Aug 18, 2011 | 4:29 pm
  #16  
 
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Hard to believe there's no other car in Latin America where this stereo will fit. He should just sell it locally. Why anyone has to drag it back to the US is beyond me.
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Old Aug 18, 2011 | 4:40 pm
  #17  
 
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Actually, shipping from South America to the US is very expensive, it would be $100 - 150 to send that radio from Brazil to New Jersey or New York. Why? The options are very limited, nobody trusts the public postal system for valuables becuase a significant portion get stolen en route, DHL and Fedex only offer air shipping, which is very expensive. I've never been able to ship packages via cargo ships, the only time cargo ships are a viable choice is when you are going to fill up an entire shipping container. So your friends request, while odd, makes sense if he has concluded the radio won't work in cars in Brazil.

On the other hand, I also find the request dubious becuase I'm pretty sure the radio would work in most cars, I don't think voltage changes in cars between the North America, South America, and Europe. The radio frequencies certainly don't :/ The lack of receipt and original packaging would be another issue for me. I regularly mule stuff for friends here in Argentina, but its always stuff that I've purchased for them in the US, not mysterious packages or devices.
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Old Aug 18, 2011 | 4:53 pm
  #18  
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Maybe what he has in his vehicle is some outsized OEM set (or maybe he has an outsized unit and his vehicle has a standard slot. He'll need an adapter to fit into his car and the style and finish aren't always nice and consistent.
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Old Aug 18, 2011 | 5:09 pm
  #19  
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Originally Posted by RichardKenner
The "standard question" is "did anybody you don't know ask you to carry a package for them". The answer to that is "no".
Exactly -- the answer is 'N' ... I'd have taken the radio.
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Old Aug 18, 2011 | 5:25 pm
  #20  
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Originally Posted by Xyzzy
Exactly -- the answer is 'N' ... I'd have taken the radio.
OP did a smart thing here. This isn't about whether there is a too cute by half answer, it's about whether OP trusts the guy and that's not something we can advise on. OP doesn't, he declined to be the guy's mule and I hope the item never makes it back here.
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Old Aug 19, 2011 | 11:03 pm
  #21  
 
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I think the OP is being ridiculous. I have brought entire disassembled desktop computers, complete with 10 hard drives, graphics cards, memory, CPUs, and even a large LCD monitor through checkpoints with no problem or serious hassle. Since the carry-on does look suspicious they always did a thorough search of the bag post-xray, which delayed me by maybe 10 minutes or so, but it was no big deal. As long as you have the space in the bag bringing a car stereo with you should be pretty easy. Although you should of course expect an additional 5-15 minute delay while they search your carry-on. The problem arises when you have something that really does look bomb-like. I don't think a car stereo qualifies.

Also, outside of a handful of countries international shipping is generally quite expensive, and often unreliable as well. Very often it makes more sense to sell the item locally and buy a new one when you arrive instead of shipping it.

If you don't completely trust him you could always take apart the stereo if it doesn't look too complicated or ask him to do so before taking it. If there are drugs in it it would be pretty obvious. I normally wouldn't be able to do that sort of thing even for a good friend because my carry-on capacity is almost always 110% full, with me even having to try to carry stuff in my pockets etc. It sounds to me like you actually don't trust this "friend" of yours so much. In which case, it's not worth the hassle anyway.

BTW, the story as you have posted here makes no sense to me. Why can't he just bring it back with him in his own carry-on when he returns? Is he not planning to return perhaps because the FBI will arrest him on arrival? And he bought it in the states, had it shipped internationally to him while traveling (for some reason that I don't understand) and then doesn't want to ship it back again? Very, very confusing story. My above advice pretty much assumes that it only sounds suspicious the way you are telling it and that in reality it all makes perfect sense if explained properly.

Otherwise it sounds like your colleague doesn't care whether you go to prison for a long time and is looking to make some extra cash. You might have considered saying yes so that you could open the thing up and see whether there was a package of brown/white powder inside of it. Then you would know for certain that your colleague was in fact a drug smuggler. I wouldn't turn him in (ratlike behavior), but I would never talk to the person again if they were trying to use me as a free mule.

Last edited by gojirasan; Aug 19, 2011 at 11:19 pm
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Old Aug 19, 2011 | 11:13 pm
  #22  
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From the thread title I was imaging it would be something like:
"Can you take this alarm clock and 6 blocks of marzipan in your carryon for me...?"
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