Scammed by Ebayer - how to come back?
Scammed by Ebayer - how to come back?
Author
Discussion

GasBlaster

Original Poster:

27,560 posts

303 months

Tuesday 22nd February 2005
quotequote all
Someone bought me a Mt Blanc pen for Christmas off Ebay, cost £80 (similar price to airport duty free for the same model). It was advertised, bought and paid for as genuine. Just discovered that it is a fake. Person who bought it is mortified, and obviously feels ripped off. They wouldn't mind if it was cheap, but it wasn't. I wouldn't mind if the damn thing worked, but it won't accept genuine MB refills!

Any ideas folks? Credit card company says that won't refund as gone past 60 days.

Cheers

GB

dick dastardly

8,325 posts

287 months

Tuesday 22nd February 2005
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You can get them booted off eBay for a start. You will need to notify eBay of the issue and they'll ask for proof that it is a fake. If you can get a licensed MB retailer to confirm in writing that it is then job done.

Until of course they open up a new account and start all over again

jamesc

2,820 posts

308 months

Tuesday 22nd February 2005
quotequote all
GasBlaster said:
Someone bought me a Mt Blanc pen for Christmas off Ebay, cost £80 (similar price to airport duty free for the same model). It was advertised, bought and paid for as genuine. Just discovered that it is a fake. Person who bought it is mortified, and obviously feels ripped off. They wouldn't mind if it was cheap, but it wasn't. I wouldn't mind if the damn thing worked, but it won't accept genuine MB refills!

Any ideas folks? Credit card company says that won't refund as gone past 60 days.

Cheers

GB



It is a good idea to pay by "Paypal" as it does offer you some protection.

www.paypal.com

gone

6,649 posts

287 months

Tuesday 22nd February 2005
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Unfortunately, my experience of e-bay is that they do not care!

All they are worried about is the money they make from punters and are not interested in problems caused by their clients!!!

Maxf

8,441 posts

265 months

Tuesday 22nd February 2005
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Ebay will do very little.

I would be tempted to open a couple of fake ebay accounts and screw with this guys auctions - get a sniping program to put in high bids at the very end - dont go daft, just more than anyone else is willing to pay. Then look as if you are going through with the auction - eventually he will file a non payment warning with ebay - tell ebay that you DID pay and DID receive the item - he'll stuggle to get the fees refunded then as it looks like he is trying it on with them.

As a buyer your friend can ask for his contact details through ebay - think about doing this and giving them to trading standards. Or just get a couple of skips delivered (after waiting for a suitable amount of time). Mock up a letter from trading standards/OFT etc (letterhead surely available online) and post it to him.

Arrange to go and look at items on a friday/saturday night (when he'll probably have better things to do) and dont turn up.

Just annoy the swine however possible - people like him make ebay a real pain!

ALL JUST EXAMPLES FOR COMEDIC PURPOSES - DO NOT DO THIS!

lonny

428 posts

267 months

Wednesday 23rd February 2005
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How easy is it to set up false ebay accounts though - they want a 'real' e-mail account (ie. no hotmail etc)
or they want a cc number - is there a way around this??