Rogue postman in Chicago offers unique mail service for brave messages

There is a mailbox that sits quietly on a Logan Square street corner. It is not attached to a house, not approved by any federal agency and with no scheduled pick ups.

It exists because of Charlie Dean. He decided that the world didn’t need faster messages; it needed braver ones.

So he became a rogue postman with a mailbox outside his home with a single promise inscribed on front: “Your message to anyone in the world…within one to 58 weeks.”

No stamps are required.

He says he gets everything from confessions, declarations of love, break ups, accusations.

Dean’s postal service begs for honesty in a world where politeness often trumps truth.

For months, Chicagoans have been slipping letters inside, trusting a stranger to carry the words they couldn’t deliver themselves.

Prolonged post office closures focus of House bill

The U.S. Postal Service needs to do a better job providing information that helps the public find service when local post offices are temporarily closed for emergency repairs or other reasons, say lawmakers behind a new bill that mandates more transparency.