Rules can say anything they want to say and they are usually a lot.. lol. I was just explaining the situations in which people see seemingly non existent labels on any tracking site. I know a couple that import FDA approved Botox via hand luggage. Many people that import cosmetic products also have a lot of hand carry involved. You won't get any recognition of the tracking number beyond (label created) till they have sorted the stuff out in whatever warehouse (apartment or garage) then ship out via the closest USPS office to them.The vendors that only provide USPS tracking figured out that the authorities could make an order and use the international logistics shipping company tracking # to figure out which container it's in and have that one pulled for inspection on arrival, since shipments are usually sent in batches.
New rules require the "final recipient" to be specified on the customs paperwork, and they are issuing huge fines when this isn't done(or inaccurate). So now even without the international tracking number, they can make an order, and customs can scan the electronic customs declarations looking for that address as "final destination" and figure out which container their order is in.
In the future it may just be "you'll get it when you get it don't ask questions".
Peptides (except hgh) are legal anyway. It's the "stealth packaging", ie, "Mislabeling" that's getting them seized. They should just ship them properly identified, properly declared, and labeled for research only, not for human use.
I use them as experimental fertilizers. You should see the size of my cucumber on PT-141.
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When dealing with other contraband apart from peptides, this is a common way of bypassing but of course can only be done on a small scale.

