Scumbag dealer stories!!!!
majorbigtime
Posts: 2,937 ✭
I suspect we all would agree that there are many fine, honest coin dealers to work with and a few scumbags too!
Maybe I'm a bit perverse, but I'd be interested in scumbag stories (maybe we will run a thread on good dealer stories later).
I'll go first.
Awhile ago, I took a couple of patterns to the Long Beach show to show to Rick Kay (a good guy) and a few others. They are in 1st generation PSCG (rattler) holders, and I was asking about upgrade potential. I stopped by to chat with a crack out artist dealer (he was crackin' 'em out left and right). I figured he would be a good judge on upgrade potential, so I asked him to look at my coins.
He said they might upgrade, but are probably worth more in the old holders. He suggested that one of my coins should somehow be enhanced by "oiling". He explained that he had a technique to open the holder, "work on" the coin, and they replace it and reseal the holder. When I questioned the ethics of such a practice, he said it's OK because the same (albeit "doctored") coin would be returned to the holder.
This seems to be unethical, deceptive and a borderline fraud. I also thought it was stupid of the dealer to brag about his chicanery. I doubt that a holder can be opened and resealed without detection, and I was skeptical that he may have been working some kind of an"angle". I put the dealer in the scumbag category.
Any comments on this scumbag story or stories of your own??
Maybe I'm a bit perverse, but I'd be interested in scumbag stories (maybe we will run a thread on good dealer stories later).
I'll go first.
Awhile ago, I took a couple of patterns to the Long Beach show to show to Rick Kay (a good guy) and a few others. They are in 1st generation PSCG (rattler) holders, and I was asking about upgrade potential. I stopped by to chat with a crack out artist dealer (he was crackin' 'em out left and right). I figured he would be a good judge on upgrade potential, so I asked him to look at my coins.
He said they might upgrade, but are probably worth more in the old holders. He suggested that one of my coins should somehow be enhanced by "oiling". He explained that he had a technique to open the holder, "work on" the coin, and they replace it and reseal the holder. When I questioned the ethics of such a practice, he said it's OK because the same (albeit "doctored") coin would be returned to the holder.
This seems to be unethical, deceptive and a borderline fraud. I also thought it was stupid of the dealer to brag about his chicanery. I doubt that a holder can be opened and resealed without detection, and I was skeptical that he may have been working some kind of an"angle". I put the dealer in the scumbag category.
Any comments on this scumbag story or stories of your own??
0
Comments
<< <i>Rick Kay (a good guy) >>
Agreed
I think that guy is scum, but I'm also not sure if it's true...the plastic isn't at all pliable, and it is nicely sealed--I think there would be some sign of tampering...
Louis
Agreed
I think that guy is scum, but I'm also not sure if it's true...the plastic isn't at all pliable, and it is nicely sealed--I think there would be some sign of tampering...
>>>>>
Jeremy: Are you calling me a scumbag?
BTW, Majorbigtime: Thanks for the compliment.
Specializing in 1854 and 1855 large FE patterns
<
<< <i>yeah who was the dealer? >>
I didn't get his name. Long Beach regualrs probably know who I am talking about. His table was towards the rear, and he's "Mr. Crackout".
<< <i>Did you check to make sure you still had your watch after leaving his booth?
/q]
You bet, and made sure I had my coins before going to wash my hands!!
EVP
How does one get a hater to stop hating?
I can be reached at evillageprowler@gmail.com
<< <i>>>><< Rick Kay (a good guy) >>
BTW, Majorbigtime: Thanks for the compliment. >>
You're welcome Rick. Others also speak highly of you.
Heck, anyone who will forego Saturday at the LB show to take a kid to a Little League game has to be a good guy!
You know the coins I am talking about, and may have an idea who I am talking about too!
Specializing in 1854 and 1855 large FE patterns
<
Why step over the dollar to get to the cent? Because it's a 55DDO.
Screw the watch, I'd check to see if I still had 2 kidneys.
2 Cam-Slams!
1 Russ POTD!
<< <i>I, about two weeks ago, travelled 121 miles to visit a shop that was supposedly a "PCGS Dealer". I got there and after looking at eight display cases, found not one coin in any holder. I politely asked the lady, who hung onto my every move as if I was going to pull out a Glock and take the place over, if she had any graded material. She showed up with a common date wheat graded AG4 by Anacs. I said, "Is that all?" and she replied, "Yes." Needless to say every coin had a top dollar price, then their grade, and their price. BUT, and it's a big BUT, every coin was overgraded and either polished or cleaned. I have since learned he's (the lady's husband) a bit odd, and does in fact clean up his materail b/4 selling. Long trip for nothing. >>
A lousy dealer, but not a scumbag.
C'mon folks, are you saying you don't have any scumbag experiences???
You should have pursued the offer. See if it can be done. If the dealer does what he says, and you can't detect slab alteration, you will have a major, major story in the making.
This dealer no longer operates a coin store but is a truly dislikable type who still operates another local business; a business that I avoid like the plague.
<< <i>About 20 years ago a story, probably true, circulated in my area about a particularly unsavory local store dealer who stole a coin from a potential seller simply by taking the coin, looking at it, keeping it, and then claiming that the seller had not shown him anything.
. >>
Now THAT'S a scumbag!!!
<< <i> Did you check to make sure you still had your watch after leaving his booth?
Screw the watch, I'd check to see if I still had 2 kidneys. >>
Now THAT'S funny!
Lane
See http://www.doubledimes.com for a free online reference for US twenty-cent pieces
For example:
<< <i>and they replace it and reseal the holder. >>
<< <i>but I'm also not sure if it's true...the plastic isn't at all pliable, and it is nicely sealed--I think there would be some sign of tampering... >>
Yes, First Generation PCGS holders (also known as rattlers) can be cracked and resealed without discovery. It became an issue at the time and to solve this problem PCGS started putting a hard plastic wrap around the edge of the first gen holder (also known as a rattler wrap).
this scumbag has his buisiness cracking out of his rear indeed - such stories makes me puketh
Marc
<< <i>Yes, First Generation PCGS holders (also known as rattlers) can be cracked and resealed without discovery. It became an issue at the time and to solve this problem PCGS started putting a hard plastic wrap around the edge of the first gen holder (also known as a rattler wrap). >>
Wrong. A dealer started to counterfeit the actual slabs and thats when PCGS changed their slab design. If they cracked without detection every rattler slab would be off the market or PCGS would be out of business.
Cameron Kiefer
Truly amazing.
Tom
Coin's for sale/trade.
Tom Pilitowski
US Rare Coin Investments
800-624-1870
B: its a really common coin
C: its going to PCGS just to see if it will X
Tom
Coin's for sale/trade.
Tom Pilitowski
US Rare Coin Investments
800-624-1870
<< <i>Wrong. A dealer started to counterfeit the actual slabs and thats when PCGS changed their slab design. >>
Cameron, They didn't actually change the design, did they?...just added the wrap?
<< <i>If they cracked without detection >>
Please read below....obviously it can and is being done.
<< <i> He explained that he had a technique to open the holder, "work on" the coin, and they replace it and reseal the holder. >>
I know you are an expert on slabs and have much more knowledge than I do, but may not have all the facts and history.
<< <i>Cameron, They didn't actually change the design, did they?...just added the wrap? >>
They changed the label, added the wrap, added a hologram etc. I am no expert on slabs either.
<< <i>
Please read below....obviously it can and is being done. >>
Obvious?????? Did you see him do it or just listen to his story? You listened to the story. If he could do that he wouldn't be bragging about it and would be quietly STILL doing it because there are still alot of rattler slabs out there. I don't believe everything people tell me and he could be full of it.
Cameron Kiefer
Knowledge is the enemy of fear
At my hometown show in Pennsylvania, there is an out-of-state copper dealer who goes to the dealer hour before the show starts and buys every single Liberty Cap and Draped Bust coin in the whole room, no matter what the price. He then piles them in his case in a heap in plain view and won't sell them to prospective customers. If you want to buy early copper at the show, you must buy it from his inventory at his inflated retail prices. The he packs up and leaves after 1 hour because nobody is going to his table (DUH). This flagrant market cornering is the reasonthat I will never buy a coin from him no matter what, and earned him a spot on my personal Scumbag list . I hope he reads this forum.
I attended a small town show in Maryland and purchased a nice 1801 large cent, corrected fraction, S-221, in VF for $350 from a regular dealer (non-copper specialist). That was about 10% below the Redbook retail price at the time. At the next table was a different well-known copper dealer who had the same coin, exact same Sheldon variety, in inferior condition (F-15), for $3,350.00. This is not a rare variety. Looking at his table, all of the coins were overpriced to a similar extent. Granted, a dealer can charge any price for a coin that he wants, but there is a limit to what is fair. I also won't ever purchase anything from that dealer.
On a more positive note, for those of you interested, I can recommend via PM a good copper dealer or two with whom I've had nice experiences.
Looking for PCGS AU58 Washington's, 32-63.
Years later, when the market was soft and I was one of a few cash buyers on the floor, I walked by his table and he asked "can I show you anything?" I replied, "no thanks, you were rude to me a few years ago and I have a long memory".
Sweet revenge!!
At first, the customer-service guy was willing to take it back, but after checking with the boss informed me that it was the company president's personal coin and he didn't want to see it again!
PCGS did not cross this coin even at PR-62. Yes, I paid the full PF-64 price for it.
(Just think of city streets clogged with a hundred thousand horses each generating 15 lbs of manure every day...)
<< <i> When I received it I discovered that its flaws did not appear in the on-line photograph and was consequently overgraded.
. >>
A doctored photo??
I've heard of some Ebayers who "enhance" photos using "photoshop" or something.
To me, that's blatent misrepresentation!!
(Just think of city streets clogged with a hundred thousand horses each generating 15 lbs of manure every day...)
Oh, by the way, the name of the dealer that gave the BAD recommendation: David Hall.
and they're cold.
I don't want nobody to shoot me in the foxhole."
Mary
Best Franklin Website