Why does it matter if there is a $100 or $1,000,000 in value in the package if you have insurance? The value of that loss is meaningless to you since you have insurance. And statistically, each package has a tiny probability of getting lost/stolen. The more packages you ship, the higher probability you have of a loss. There is a reason why an insurance company charges less to send one $20,000 package than two $10,000 packages. Because best not to draw attention to the packages. There is a reason why dealers don't put coins in a padlocked canvas bag and have an armored car drive it from place to place. These bags were arriving empty. A generic FedEx box that looks like millions of others that is going from one place to another doesn't draw attention. We use them because they are generally very fast (less time to steal the package) and they are generally reliable. My insurance policy is actually cheaper to send a coin INTERNATIONALLY with FedEx or UPS than it is to send DOMESTICALLY using USPS with tracking. That says a lot about their reliability.
Penny smart dollar stupid is always a thing. It sucks when packages are stolen and I don’t wish that on anyone, but the issues with those services aren’t a secrecy. A few extra bucks in private insurance for a better service is worth it. Fair enough if the private insurance insists on it for a shipment of that value. Hopefully whoever sent this has an assurance that they will get compensated
You're missing the point. You point to issues with "those services". If the insurance company underwriter, with all their access to losses, is charging a rate for those two services that is a fraction of the rate for the USPS, it means that they are far safer than the USPS. Based on what I could find online, FedEx & UPS lose packages around .1% while the USPS loses packages around .5%. Again, this shows that those services are safer.
It means thats what they choose to charge nothing more. USPS does the final delivery for many of the final delivery for UPS and Fedex anyways. You also now have random people in personal vesicles delivering such packages If someone wants to use such services that blatantly say they have no liability for a package with those contents thats certainly their choice. Its a shame it happened, but I will stand by for multiple reasons that its an extra risk regardless of what insurance is charging, talk to a postal inspector about how much they would care about a private company losing a package if nothing else
Yeah, no apology necessary, your coins are gone, suck it up buttercup. What about the buyer, and the buyers he had lined up. I sure as hell wouldn't trust any of them with 100 G's of my money.
The incidences of theft seem to have gotten worse now than 5 or 10 years ago. "Lost" packages were very rare but even the online tracking can be off. Last year my uncle had some very important papers that needed to get somewhere.....they hit Newark and were "Out For Delivery" with no details for the next 2 months. Needless to say, after 2 days of no movement, we re-sent duplicate documents to where they needed to go. The major carriers and even the USPS lost alot of honest, hard-working veterans the last few years (especially after Covid) and got the dregs of the labor force, people prone to criminal behavior, many probably with criminal records. Add in smartphones and the ability to find out where a package came from or went, and all of a sudden valuable packages go missing.
A veteran employee with stock and a nice 401(k) and pension ? Probably not. Temp workers who know they will be hired seasonally or for only a few months ? I'm not so sure.
I'm not ruling out hanky-panky on the sender or recipient side (cough cough insurance fraud cough cough) but we have very few details here. $100k and the insurance investigator will be all over it I'd think.
A 401k last year is a 201k now and that monthly contribution starts to hurt. And pension ? Who knows what evil lurks...
This seems to be a more and more common, my son bought a Apple lap top on eBay, and what showed was some steel washers of all things to simulate the weight, so basically it comes down to your word against the sellers, or improper labeling coins enclosed…LOL
I think the origin of the shipment says allot, many employees that work for these companies know this, and can tip of others that the shipment is coming from a coin company. Not the same thing, but the concept is the same, several years ago I was on way to work and my truck broke down I actually got in touch with the roadside freeway patrol, they towed me to a park and ride and I called my wife to pick me uo when I returned 2 hours later someone broke in to my truck and stole all my tools, later found out from the police that a freeway service patrol employee was responsible, tipping off friends and other co workers of a unattended vehicle, and an easy mark !
That's an awfully nice 1806 half dollar for just an AU-53. Unless there's something wrong with it that doesn't show up in the photo. You'd never find something like that in a 53 slab at a general auction.