I don't know how to prove to u that I'm not another source bashing him. I guess you can either believe it or not believe it. I'm just a regular guy that is pissed off someone has been using my name and address to send their gear. I've cleaned my house out because now I'm afraid the police might bust my door down and search the place thinking I've been making roids. If anyone has ordered from him, if you don't mind message me and tell me the return address on your package. I'm pretty sure he has used mine for more than one package because the return address was a printed label. The person it was addressed to was hand written....
I don't know anything about this lab, I'm on testosterone replacement therapy (TRT), I have no need. I'm not defending them, just saying that I doubt he used your address on other peoples shipments. He probably uses each customers own return address for each order. So the next guy that orders, he'll use his address as the return address also, not yours or anybody else's. Customer #1 is going to Customer #1 Address, so return address will be Customer #1 Address. Customer #2's order will be addressed to Customer #2 and return address will be, Customer #2, etc. etc.
Do you know why? Because if something screwed up, you gave him the wrong address, you put a fake name, or whatever happened and it got "returned to sender" well, he cannot use his real address, so you know what happens to mail that is returned to sender to an INVALID address?
"What happens to these dead letters at the mail recovery centers?
In the case of packages, which are not scanned, workers actually open up the large envelopes and parcels to see if they can identify the intended recipient or errant sender. They will forward the package when possible, and sometimes they will even contact people by phone to track down a rightful owner. It all depends on the value of the discovered items. If the chattels cannot be forwarded, they are sent to auction for bulk purchase by flea market vendors and others who will buy bundles of similar items and sort through them on their own."
What Happens to Dead Letters at the Post Office's Mail Recovery Center? - Yahoo! Voices - voices.yahoo.com
So that's why he's using your own address as return to sender address, so that the mail cannot be returned to an invalid/fake address, and then the shipment is opened, and then who knows what could happen next, the only person to follow up with next, if they wanted to make anything of it, would be you. Since your address is the only valid address on there.
I still don't know though I think it could raise flags using an address like that, a postal inspector could think of it as suspicious since it's not a common thing that's done. So, I'm not saying he did the right thing. I'm just saying what his reason to do so probably was and that he only used your address as the returned to sender address, and not using your address on other packages. Or else if something happened to future packages and they were returned to sender, you would be getting free gear. Have you been getting any free gear? Then most likely he's not doing that.
Lastly, he probably has the return address typed out (printed) since, there's some kind of report out there on how postal inspectors find suspicious packages, and one reason is hand written addresses. So apparently, packages that have printed labels for the address, appear more professional and less likely to be considered suspicious. So that's another reason he could do that. Although I would guess it would make more sense and look more legit to use the printed labels for both addresses, not just one.