Besides the rarity of allowing as evidence the drugs a paid UPS employee informant found in a package they opened based on basic racial profiling (black dudes don't ship $90 packages apparently) the other big takeaway here is that the defendant couldn't actually challenge the submission of the evidence because they used an alias instead of their actual name.
From the article linked above:
Note that the use of an alias during a controlled delivery only did ONE THING: Made the guy unable to challenge evidence sent to that name.
From the article linked above:
"Sam Niel" does not exist, therefore Phillips Thompson cannot challenge the search. It's a form of disavowal and the courts will not let someone make two incompatible claims:
1. That's not my stuff.
2. The search of that stuff was unconstitutional.
Note that the use of an alias during a controlled delivery only did ONE THING: Made the guy unable to challenge evidence sent to that name.
