Oh -- and from my experiences the person who the item was suppose to have been delivered to has to contcat the USPS.
I e-mailed earlier this week (maybe last weekend

) and got an reply right away.
Here was their e-mail in part:
Since you have not received this item and we show that it was delivered, I will be happy to document the problem for a resolution. However, I need some additional information so this can be sent to the correct office and you can be contacted. Please reply to this email with the following information:
- Your home telephone number
- Full name of the sender
- Address of the sender
- Full name of the recipient
- Address of the recipient
- Type of mail (letter, large envelope, package, large package, or unknown)
- Class of mail (Express Mail®, First Class Mail®, international, military, Periodicals, Priority Mail®, Bulk Mail, Parcel Post®, Media Mail®, or mixed class)
- Services added (Certified Mail, Registered Mail, Return Receipt, Merchandise, Insured, C.O.D., Signature Confirmation, and/or Delivery Confirmation)
- Label number
- Location the mail item was sent from (senders residence, other residence / business, Post Office ZIP Code, Collection Box®, or unknown)
- Time and date the mail item was sent
- Contents of the mail item and value
- Whether you would like to receive a call regarding this issue (There is no guarantee that further information can be provided via email.)
- If you suspect foul play:
- Do you know who was involved?
- Do you know the name(s) of whom you suspect?
- Was it a Postal employee?
- Do you have a description?
Quite honestly, for one stinkin' pin all that effort is not even worth it to me and I am just dropping it. Someone other than I was delivered a nice Tink pin is my guess.