Postal crimes are almost a daily event. These are the ones we found today

Attack on U.S. Postal Service Mail Carrier Lands Oklahoma City Man in Federal Prison
KANTRELL DAWAN HENDERSON, 34, of Oklahoma City, has been sentenced to serve 18 months in federal prison for assault on a federal officer or employee, announced U.S. Attorney Robert J. Troester.

‘I should not be delivering mail’ | Bloomington USPS worker accused of taking marijuana from packages, torching 1,000 pieces of mail
Detectives launched an investigation after a relative of Michelle Crabtree reported finding trash bags filled with opened packages and mail.

Rochester man pleads guilty to his role in financial fraud scheme involving stolen checks
U.S. Attorney Michael DiGiacomo announced today that Sheldon Marquis Adams, 26, of Rochester, NY, pleaded guilty before Chief U.S. District Judge Elizabeth A. Wolford to conspiracy to commit bank fraud, which carries a maximum penalty of 30 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.




The very fact that Postal Times can publish a daily scoreboard of postal crime is an indictment of the Postal Inspection Service. No functioning law-enforcement system produces enough fresh crime to fill a daily briefing — yet postal crime is so rampant, so unchecked, so brazen, that there’s always another batch ready for tomorrow’s installment.
You don’t get a “crime roundup” every day unless the situation is completely out of control and the people in charge have utterly failed.
If USPIS leadership had a clue — Postal Times wouldn’t have the material to run a daily crime ticker. But leadership created this mess — and Postal Times is simply documenting the fallout, day after day after day.