>get letter today from the police department warrant squad
>it's addressed to someone that doesn't even live here called tynique
So this guy purposely gave the wrong address to mislead them
How do I avoid getting my door getting busted and me getting raided since I can't even open the letter
Take it to the police station with some of your own mail + I.D and explain the situation.
Take this expression on your face when they come next time
Your police department should have a public non-emergency phone number.
>>17990283
Story time. TLDR at the bottom.
Recently I found a credit card lying on the sidewalk. Since I was near the PMO (police station) on my base and lacking any better idea, I brought it in to give it to them, figuring they'd have a better idea what to do with it.
They kept me in there for an hour and a half. An hour and a half. Asking me questions, having me fill out statements, wasting my fucking time. They didn't even express that they thought I was guilty of anything, it was just their procedure. All because I tried to do the "right thing." Oh, and this was the same goddamn day I got back from a deployment.
TLDR: Do not get involved, do not go own there, do not call them and tell them. Write "Return to Sender; Recipient no longer at this address" on the envelope and stick the thing back in the mailbox.
No one will kick down your door. At most they will come by and knock. If it was a serious arrest warrant, they wouldn't have mailed it.
it's probably for not paying a speeding ticket or something. if it was for a more serious offense, you'd know.
>>17990307
A credit card and unopened mail are very different things