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eBay Scam Artist's Sports Card & Memorabilia Collection Went on the Auction Block Today

An article in today's Houston Chronicle:

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SPORTS HISTORY UP FOR BID

Need a Mantle card? Unitas? Thief's loss can be your gain
Sports collection confiscated by Fort Bend County is auctioned today
By ERIC HANSON
Copyright 2005 Houston Chronicle


ROSENBERG - When Fort Bend County holds its annual auction today, a few out-of-the-ordinary items will be mixed in with the usual worn-out chairs, battered file cabinets and obsolete typewriters.

The county will also be selling a collection of sports memorabilia including autographed photos of Nolan Ryan, Mickey Mantle and Johnny Unitas along with thousands of vintage trading cards and other items.

"This is the first time we have ever had sports memorabilia. You don't come across things like this all that often," said Russell Loehr, the county's inventory control manager.

The collection was amassed by Raj Trivedi, 29, who forfeited it to the state as part of a plea bargain arrangement with the Fort Bend County District Attorney's Office in a theft case three years ago.

Trivedi accepted a three-year prison term and agreed to hand over the collectibles so the county could sell the property and give the proceeds to his victims, said Assistant District Attorney Mike Elliott.

Elliott said more than 100 people lost a total of about $110,000 to Trivedi, who was living in the Katy area at the time.

"He was ripping off people all over the place," Elliott said.

Fort Bend County investigators first became involved with Trivedi about three years ago, said sheriff's Detective David Schultz.

Trivedi started selling electronic goods on eBay and other Web sites beginning in 2000, Schultz said. Trivedi was living in San Diego at the time.

"It was for a ridiculously low price. He did ship some of the product. Then it got to the point where he was not shipping the product and he was stalling his eBay bidders," he said.

Schultz said there were more than 1,000 victims in the United States and abroad with losses mounting to more than $1 million.

"When he fled San Diego he moved to Katy, Texas, and he continued to victimize another 110 people," Schultz said.

Prosecutors in California caught up to Trivedi, and he was returned to that state where theft and fraud charges led to a three-year prison sentence.

Elliott said Trivedi's Texas prison term, handed down in November 2002 and the California sentence from March of that year were served concurrently in a California prison.

According to news accounts in San Diego, most of Trivedi's victims lost between $800 to $1,000 each.

California prison officials said Trivedi was released from prison on parole in September 2003.

Schultz said that while Trivedi was running his Internet theft operation, he was also putting together an impressive collection of sports memorabilia. Schultz said police do not know if Trivedi obtained the sports items legally or illegally.

"We could never tell where it came from. He also dabbled in selling those items on eBay as well," Schultz said.

As county employees prepared for the auction they were understandably curious about the value of the collection.

Spread out on tables in a giant room with hundreds of old computers are boxes full of baseball cards and photographs.

Several large framed pictures are on display including one of a grinning Mantle next to manager Casey Stengel after the slugger won the American League Triple Crown in 1956.

There is also a stunning black-and-white photo of Ted Williams taking a mighty swing on Opening Day in 1947.

Loehr, who is accustomed to selling old desks and burnt-out microwave ovens, said county officials have not had the collection appraised.

"We are not in the position to judge a lot of this stuff," he said.

"This is not my area of expertise. I had it as a kid and I had a big shoebox full of stuff, and when I went to college, my mom threw that stuff out along with my comic books."

Loehr said he and other county employees have not been able to check the authenticity of the autographed items.

"It's a buyer beware situation. In looking at some of the stuff, we do have a couple of things that I am sure are legitimate items," he said.

The auction begins at 10 a.m. at the county annex building at 4520 Reading in Rosenberg.

Cash, checks with a bank letter of guarantee and credit cards will be accepted.

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PERSONAL NOTE FROM ME:

I went to this auction today and it was the biggest single sighting of junk that I've seen in ages. The Babe Ruth, Ted Williams and Mantle autographs (if real) may have been the only items worth over $20. The rest was total rubbish: about 80 graded cards from the 60's and 70's - all graded BVG 4 or worse. A bunch of mid-90's sets in binders plus large card board boxes full of piles of unsorted low grade cards from the 60's through the 90's. There were also a bunch of unopened boxes like first year Upper Deck football. This really didn't deserve to be in a major newspaper. I've seen a dozen garage sales better than this.

Comments

  • jrdolanjrdolan Posts: 2,549 ✭✭
    Too bad he already unloaded his good stuff (if he ever had any) before the plea agreement. No doubt that's WHY he was ready to cut a deal, because he knew the stuff he had left was junk. Probably scammed the prosecutors by overestimating the value of what he had remaining by a factor of 20.

    Anyway, it's good to read about bad guys getting nailed. I hope some of the scammers who surf these boards looking for tips read this and think twice about their next fraudulent auction.
  • WinPitcherWinPitcher Posts: 27,726 ✭✭✭
    Loehr said he and other county employees have not been able to check the authenticity of the autographed items.



    "It's a buyer beware situation. In looking at some of the stuff, we do have a couple of things that I am sure are legitimate items," he said.

    The auction begins at 10 a.m. at the county annex building at 4520 Reading in Rosenberg.

    Cash, checks with a bank letter of guarantee and credit cards will be accepted.




    Interesting. This county seems to be doing almost the same thing.



    SD
    Good for you.
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