MovieChat Forums > Breach (2007) Discussion > I delivered packages to Robert Hanssen's...

I delivered packages to Robert Hanssen's wife this Christmas.


I took a seasonal job with UPS - the United Parcel Service, as a driver helper ; During the three weeks leading up to Christmas, in response to the increase in parcels circulating that attends the holiday shopping season - particularly online purchases, UPS customarily hires people to assist delivery drivers in keeping pace with the high volume of deliveries.

The driver I accompanied had a route that served Vienna, Virginia. On my first week assisting him, I off-handedly remarked that I was certain our route was within a mile radius of the convicted spy's house. I did't realize until later that the house was far closer than first thought.

The week starting Dec. 15, my second week - having completed only three full days on the job, I started becoming familiar with the assigned route. It was in that second week that a sense of deja vu struck me, on one of the latter streets on our route. I recalled reading the book Spy : The Inside Story of How the FBI's Robert Hanssen Betrayed America in March 07, in anticipation of the release of Breach. That is why I was having difficulty placing where I had seen that particular street name before, until I made the association to the book. I shared my suspicion with the driver, which made for some idle conversation, nothing more. The days following, that same week - now armed with my association confirmed, I began seizing on a particular house on that street - also based on my recall from the book, which included a photo of the home. It was a modest split-level with a dark brown wood-paneled facade. It looked rather like the Brady Bunch house - its decor style was certainly of the same vintage. There were no deliveries addressed to that home that week.

Week three, Monday - as the driver and I stopped about one house past the cause of my vexation, a woman - about to leave her driveway, just as we pulled up - called out to me while on the truck, asking if we had any deliveries for her. The driver affirmed as much when he handed me an envelope labeled with that exact address. I walked the package to her on the driveway, and once she received it into her hands and walked towards the home, I succumbed to my great wanting to confirm my suspicion, asking,"May I ask you - I hope I'm not being indelicate, but is this the old Hanssen house?", to which the woman - whose face changed from genial to chastened, though not irked - replied,"It still is the Hanssen house. You can see the name on the envelope. I'm Mrs. Hanssen." Hooo boy - I really walked into that one! The mortification of my faux pas washed over my face instantly - with the haste, force, and sensation of water brought to a rolling boil and launched from a five-quart saucepan. I just then realized that I assumed - wrongly - that the family had moved, in the wake of the harsh light of scrutiny that descended on the home by the patriarch's betrayal, and that I was speaking to the 'current' resident, which of course, I was. The woman, who, by this inelegant and unsolicited exchange, (courtesy of me) introduced herself to me, continued by saying."I have six children. It was hard, but we're still here, life goes on.". Before she receded to the anonymity of the dim interior of her home, she - perhaps cued by my ethnic appearance, asked,"Do you celebrate Christmas?" "Yes I do.", I answered glibly, my non-attendance of church cemented long ago, though immaterial to my answer. I tried lastly to appease Mrs. Hanssen for the effrontery I caused with a wavering, half-hearted,"Have a Merry Christmas." She gamely reciprocated, and thus was concluded my 'chance' meeting with the wife of the spy last convicted by the federal government of betraying the United States.

Epilogue : Tuesday, the day following - still feeling like a first-class heel for the awkward exchange with Mrs. Hanssen, I sought to make a more thorough apology to her that day. Luckily, there was a delivery for that address that day as well. I walked the envelope to front porch of the house, set it on the welcome mat, and gave a door a firm knock. I returned to the truck immediately, before anyone answered the door.(In UPS training, unless the delivery requires signature confirmation from the addressee, the purpose of knocking is to alert any occupants that something has been delivered - not to determine if anyone is home, or to hand it directly to the addressee.) As I was walking towards the truck, I heard the door crack open. Mrs. Hanssen picked up the envelope from the doormat. I said hello and attempted to apologize, but she indiffidently assured me,"Oh, don't worry about it, don't worry about it." I would guess that she is accustomed to being the focus of unwanted attention, to a greater degree, and from far worse people.



Everything Is Connected

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that is sooooo cool!

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Interesting.

Maybe THAT could be a movie.

Al

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Certainly, a movie based on that anecdote couldn't be any more mundane and uneventful than Breach.


Lisa : Women won't like being shot in the face.
Homer : Women will like what I tell them to like!

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Maybe the wife is the REAL spy!!!

-"who said anything about sabotage?"

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Wow ... That is pretty cool stuff you got here man ! *beep* I'll be damned ! Just watched the movie Breach, thats why ^^ But you got to met the Worst traitor of the States's wife. Anyways, fun anecdote !

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[deleted]


Your reading comprehension needs work. I worked as a seasonal driver helper, though that's not really the issue, as your statement about UPS drivers not having the time to write such a long story speaks to your prejudice about all blue collar workers being of one education caste only.

You likely assumed also, that because the anonymity of the internet invites self-aggrandisement, that means all stories written herein are manifestly bullsh_t.


A man on death row, heard to complain of his last meal: "These aren't Spaghettios."

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did it may you want to know what the packages contain?
FBI are probably still outside her house checking up on her from time to time, look out for them :P

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Aren't self-aggrandizement and anonymity mutually exclusive terms?

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Not if you follow politics!

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This post has made me never want to use UPS for anything again, since clearly their deliverers (temporary or not) see no problem with talking about the identities of UPS customers on internet message boards.

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Oh, cool your jets. I don't think anyone will be reporting on YOUR deliveries on this website or any other website. Are you in hiding?

"I'd never ask you to trust me. It's the cry of a guilty soul."

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something tells me he wasn't made a permanent employee. dunno. just a feeling.



Pardon me, would you have any Grey Poupon?

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Your writing style gave me a headache.

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Sounds fishy to me.... you thought that the house was in the area, you were sure that it was the house, the woman walks out and you get her package......... but you don't look on the label to make sure that it is the correct address or the name on a package? How could you pull into one driveway not already knowing that there was a package for the house next door?

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...but you don't look on the label to make sure that it is the correct address or the name on a package? How could you pull into one driveway not already knowing that there was a package for the house next door?
Repeat, I worked as a helper, that is, I did not drive the delivery truck, but assisted the driver by walking packages to the homes. He drives to the vicinity, hands the package to me, and I confirm the address on the box/parcel matches the home I'm walking to.

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The driver affirmed as much when he handed me an envelope labeled with that exact address. I walked the package to her on the driveway, and once she received it into her hands and walked towards the home, I succumbed to my great wanting to confirm my suspicion, asking,"May I ask you - I hope I'm not being indelicate, but is this the old Hanssen house?", to which the woman - whose face changed from genial to chastened, though not irked - replied,"It still is the Hanssen house. You can see the name on the envelope. I'm Mrs. Hanssen." Hooo boy - I really walked into that one!


and I confirm the address on the box/parcel matches the home I'm walking to


So did you check the name and address or not? She said the Hanssen name was on the lable. If you checked the name/address why didn't you see the name?

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So did you check the name and address or not?
I checked the address. For most deliveries, the name is not relevant to me, thus I would scan the address only. Slightly more effort though that may seem, to check both the name and address, it's difficult to do while in a brisk walk, so economy dictates scanning the minimum amount of info. Given my interest in that particular house, you'd reckon I'd have made a note of it that time, but I didn't. So I confirmed it with the resident instead.

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Sorry, it just seems like you would have checked the name, or recognized her. I wouldn't recognize her just walking down the street. But if I was delivering in what I thought was her neighborhood I would have googled her picture to refresh my memory. You can google her address and that would have verified it was her house.


I still don't understand why she didn't change her name and move.

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What a bunch of suspicious people we have here...and so interested in the details of package delivery. Why would you google the actual Hanssen house or Mrs. Hanssens pic? THAT sounds creepy. Besides, people look very different in person, and in poor lighting, than in pictures.



"I'd never ask you to trust me. It's the cry of a guilty soul."

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Why would you google the actual Hanssen house or Mrs. Hanssens pic?



Curiosity.

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Kind of curious - all the whining responses here. Minor interesting story here... that's about it.

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