Pinnacle Elements
Subscriber
It’s not admission of guilt but it is accepting the package. Once again- one of my best friends went through a ~2 year long federal case relative to this. I can guarantee you signing and accepting the package is counter productive if you find yourself in a similar situation.Signing for a package isn't a admission of guilt. It proves nothing and it's only more suspicious when you say no and slam the door on the postal carrier.
There are a few reasons a postal carrier would require a signature even if the sender didn't request one.
Refusing something “you don’t recognize ordering” does not make it more suspicious. Anyone, anywhere can send you anything. The illegal part is your acceptance.