2007 Silver eagle on ebay 9.00 per coin
tizofthe
Posts: 1,365 ✭✭✭
Get them while they are HOT!link
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Comments
If folks don't mind waiting a bit.
Camelot
San Diego, CA
AL
Oh well probably bogus, who in their right mind would sell them below melt just after purchasing them?
Seller claims to have another 600.
Since there is no such thing as free-money,
this is a scam.
Hard to believe that people will actually send
him money.
<< <i>I see that no one ask if they could pick up the coins.
This guy lives about 30 minutes from me. Don't know him but if I had bought some I would pick them up myself.
That "performance chip" he bought won't add any performance to his car, other than a lighter wallet. I bought one for my Neon before (just for the hell of it, knew it was a scam) and I got a transistor and 6" of wiring. Laughed my ass off.
Positive BST: WhiteThunder (x2), Ajaan, onefasttalon, mirabela, Wizard1, cucamongacoin, mccardguy1
Negative BST: NONE!
I doubt this story will have a happy ending. Hope so, but I doubt it.
<< <i>Me thinks the light at the end of the tunnel is a TRAIN !!!!
I doubt this story will have a happy ending. Hope so, but I doubt it. >>
2 of the 4 things he has sold on eBay wound up being negative.
I guess those that bought have a 50/50 chance of getting their items.
But the 2 items were delivered eventually. 1 being 30 days later. good luck guys
Box of 20
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=250082636931&ssPageName=MERC_VIC_RCRX_Pr3_PcY_BIN_IT&refitem=250082465559&itemcount=3&refwidgetloc=closed_view_item&usedrule1=CrossSell_LogicX&refwidgettype=cross_promot_widget
Silver Dollars!
Come on people, how can anyone think that this is real?
AJ
PCGS Registries
Box of 20
SeaEagleCoins: 11/14/54-4/5/12. Miss you Larry!
PCGS Registries
Box of 20
SeaEagleCoins: 11/14/54-4/5/12. Miss you Larry!
<< <i>How about 2008 Silver Eagles......
If folks don't mind waiting a bit. >>
I am taking pre orders for 2010 SAE's
"The Villain"
Shiba Rescue Organization
A Shiba Inu is a terrible thing to waste!
I haven't had a fraudlent seller, how hard is it to recover the money?
-Fuzz
<< <i>Since this guy requires immediate payment through paypal, and paypal covers you against loss for $200, what is the risk?
I haven't had a fraudlent seller, how hard is it to recover the money?
-Fuzz >>
If the guy cleans out his account, you're screwed!!! There are going to be some people crying!!
<< <i>If the guy cleans out his account, you're screwed!!! There are going to be some people crying!! >>
So the paypal "insurance" just means that you get a refund if they can collect from the crook?
-Fuzz
<< <i>Since this guy requires immediate payment through paypal, and paypal covers you against loss for $200, what is the risk?
I haven't had a fraudlent seller, how hard is it to recover the money?
-Fuzz >>
Paypal doesn't cover squat. This could have serious consequences for anyone buying and deciding to initiate a chargeback. Paypal cannot recover money for you if the seller's account is empty--and any scammer would perform nightly sweeps of the Paypal account, long before Paypal could step in and confiscate anything. And since doing a chargeback is against Paypal policy, you might get your money back through your credit card issuer and lose your Paypal account at the same time.
<< <i>Since this guy requires immediate payment through paypal, and paypal covers you against loss for $200, what is the risk?
I haven't had a fraudlent seller, how hard is it to recover the money?
-Fuzz >>
I've had 5 paypal claims over the years, paypal has always paid within a couple of weeks. In nearly all of them the seller disappeared. The guarantee by paypal is just that, has nothing to do with recovering the money from the seller. If you don't get the goods, you get your money back (up to the limits). I purchased a 100 ounce silver bar last year for $1350, the seller sold several and didn't deliver. Paypal credited me the limit at the time, $1000, and I did a chargeback with my card for the remainder, with not a word about it from paypal, no problems.
JT
Ankur
PCGS Registries
Box of 20
SeaEagleCoins: 11/14/54-4/5/12. Miss you Larry!
His response was: "I am in the hospital and need the money. i will be sending these out proroty mail."
Thus, I have concluded the answer is unreasonable. When one "needs the money", does one do everything in their power to lose money? How is "I need the money" an answer to the question "Why are you intentionally losing so much money?". Also, his bidding habits show him to have spent over a grand this past month on hotrod car accessories. If he was in the hospital as he claims, and needed the money for medical bills, to such an extent that he would sell items at half their market value, it doesn't make much sense that he is blowing it all on car accessories. Obviously his buying habits show his hospital bill story to be bogus. I won't bother figuring out how one buys and sells on eBay, and sends over 700 silver eagles priority mail from the hospital bed, or how the nurses are reacting to $1000 worth of car parts arriving in the room, but I'll leave that to everyone else's imagination. In addition to the car parts, he's buying various young men's cologne. This doesn't prove anything, but it signals that this eBayer is a child or a young man, not an elderly man wasting away in a hospital.
Now, in my experience, scammers are stupid. But, they're usually in agreement upon a few basic things. First, register all accounts with bogus information (ie Paypal and ebay). He may or may not have that covered. Second, allow only Paypal payments or payments made to PO boxes (he has that covered). Third, make as much money as possible in the shortest amount of time (he's got that covered too, as he's listing his entire eagle hoard before anyone has a chance to leave feedback for the previous dutch auction). However, one thing he didn't do was cover his bases insomuch as his bidding history is there for all to see. That means all it takes is one seller willing to give up this guy's address and we can all file fraud complaints and police reports. If he is a scammer, does that make him a complete moron, or is he perhaps not a scammer? If he is a scammer, I have no doubt in my mind he'll be caught, which would make him pretty stupid. But then again...
I think I've convinced myself his story(s) thus far is completely bogus. But that doesn't mean he is attempting to scam people. He might very well send these eagles out. Therefore I have to ask myself what on god's green earth would cause someone to sell a huge hoard of eagles at half market value and then lie about his circumstances? Some thoughts quickly come to mind... the eagles are stolen. This fits the "hot" coins scenario to a T. If he stole them or obtained them from someone who did, he'd want to liquidate them as fast as possible and at below market prices. The same would hold true if these were perhaps his parent's eagles, and he were cashing in on the find while they were away. These are 2007 eagles, which means he paid the current inflated silver price for them--it's not like he bought these 5 years ago when silver was $4 and now has no idea what they're worth.
I'm 50/50 on whether or not anyone will get their eagles. I'm 90% sure if you don't get them, he'll be caught, but there is no certainty that anyone will recoever their money. I'm about 100% sure that eagles or no eagles, they're not his to sell.
<< <i>For his four Ebay sales he got 2 negs (vacuum cleaners). Buyers paid $30 for Priority Mail but he didn't send that way. Beware of someone that pays $495 for a year of sports picks ("$1 will win you $13000"). He is probably a gambler that needs to pay off "Big Louie".
It also looks like he is building a car from scratch.
To me it sounds like he is selling 1 Roll for $9.
13.1 Buyer Protection Programs. If you buy an item using PayPal and either do not receive the item or receive an item that you believe is significantly not as described by the seller, we encourage you to open a Dispute with the seller in our Resolution Center. By doing so, you will initiate our Online Dispute Resolution Process—a step-by-step system designed to facilitate communication between you and the seller in order to get resolution of the issue. If your dialogue with the seller fails to produce a satisfactory result, you can then escalate the Dispute into a Claim that we will evaluate for reimbursement under one of the following programs:
1. PayPal Buyer Complaint Policy - Our best efforts program to reimburse Users for losses only to the extent we are able to recover the funds from sellers.
2. PayPal Buyer Protection Policy - Our program to reimburse Users for losses for up to $2,000.00 USD for eligible items purchased on eBay and $200.00 USD for all items purchased on eBay except those items identified below (see section 13.9 to determine whether a transaction on eBay gets $2,000.00 USD coverage or $200.00 USD coverage).This section 13.1.b is effective for items purchased on or after 01/17/07. To view the PayPal Buyer Protection terms and conditions for items purchased prior to 01/17/07 please refer to Exhibit A below.
3. Buyer Protection for eBay Express - Our program to reimburse Users for the full amount of losses for items purchased on eBay Express.
4. Extended Buyer Protection with PayPal Credit - Our program to reimburse Users for the full amount of losses for items purchased using the PayPal Plus Credit Card or PayPal Buyer Credit.
These programs only cover payments for tangible, physical goods. All other payments, such as payments for intangibles, for services or for licenses and other access to digital content are not covered by any Buyer Protection Program that we offer (but may be covered by Chargeback rights).
13.9 eBay Items Eligible for PayPal Buyer Protection. Every item on eBay (except Live Auctions and vehicles) that meets the above requirements is eligible for PayPal Buyer Protection up to $200.00 USD, but items are only eligible for PayPal Buyer Protection up to $2,000.00 USD (and should be identified as eligible items in the eBay listing) if:
1. The seller's eBay feedback rating is at least 50; at least 98% of the seller's eBay feedback is positive, the seller is a PayPal User from an eligible country, the seller has a Verified Premier or Verified Business Account in good standing; and
2. The listing was on an eligible eBay site (eBay.com and certain other eBay sites self identified as such) and PayPal is listed as an acceptable payment method.
This section 13.9 is effective for items purchased on or after 01/17/07. To view the PayPal Buyer Protection terms and conditions for items purchased prior to 01/17/07 please refer to Exhibit A below. To view the Buyer Complaint Policy terms and conditions for items purchased prior to 01/17/07 please refer to Exhibit B below.
So, for those buying more than $200 worth of these fine ASEs, they are S.O.L. for Buyer Protection. His score is 35 and his feedback is less than the required 98%. I wonder how many of those people that bought 100 realize this?
Vietnam Vet 1968-1969
2. The listing was on an eligible eBay site (eBay.com and certain other eBay sites self identified as such) and PayPal is listed as an acceptable payment method.
Translation: Your screwed.
Feedback is less than 50
This should be interesting.
He bought and I just emailed him and asked him why?
He said when he went to pay the guy's address and information came up and he was verified and all. He said if he didn't get his eagles, could I meet him in Camden soon.
I told him to let me know if he got them so I could post to the forum his experience.
I told him I just couldn't pull the trigger on this one.
We'll see.
I wonder if this is "hot" mdse and the seller thinks this is like fencing without face to face contact and the risks associated with that?