No, from what I hear a lot more packages go missing (i.e. customs employee most likely taking home for themselves) than actually get notified with a love letter. I've only heard of a couple of people on here getting love letters and that was usually because they were dealing with a noob seller who had horrible packaging.I've had 2 or 3 go missing, and that was back during the CP postal strike. Funny thing though, my customers (I was only shipping domestic at the time) got the packages I sent, including the innards, except for the actual product and its vac-seal bag. The envelopes had a sticker on it that said "Canada Post has opened and re-sealed this package". I am betting it was a few of those wonderful government union workers sitting in a depot, bitching about not getting paid for just sitting there on strike, and deciding that finding some supplementary income in the idle mail backlog might be a good idea. There were no issues out of it for my customers, just the package and that's it. And some CP employees who got away with a couple of ounces of primo cannabis.The sheer volume of drugs sent through the mail every week makes it nearly impossible for them to catch even a decent percentage of it, and then to address each case on top of that would take a bureaucracy three times the size of what they have now (which is already bloated beyond belief).