Another Scam on E Bay


I bought a pair of Polk fx 1000 speakers from a company in California off of EBay, they were advertised as being new with a 5 year waranty, upon receiving them, they were obviously not new, also with a broken dipole switch and stripped threads on the bidding post, I called Polk and they said that the seller was not a authorized dealer and that there was no waranty, luckily my credit card company has put a hold on the charge, after that , the conpany contacted me and offered to replace speakers if I filed a claim for shipping damage against ups, I told them that the speakers were not damaged by ups, and would not participate in fraud against ups, at that point they hung up on me, this company has many ads for polk speakers on ebay, before you buy ask for sereial numbers and check with polk !
128x128samski
Samski, I'd suggest first that you report this incident to Ebay immediately. They have (or should have) a strong interest in providing quality services to their customers. To the extent that complaints are isolated, very little will be done. Ebay makes money on every transaction - be it a fair deal or a scam. Unless and until Ebay learns of a verified scam (i.e., when enough people complain), it's business as usual for them. Secondly, please offer the identity of this seller to anyone who is interested and sends you a private email - although "Califorina", "5 year warrenty", and "many ads for Polk speakers" are great clues!
Thanks for sharing. I wish we could have a place on Audiogon just to keep track of anyone that is involved in a scam. 99% of the people are cool. It's the 1% that just ruins everything.
Polk has to honor the warranty if you are the first retail purchaser. It makes no difference which retailer you bought it from, "authorized" or not. This has been litigated many times in the past and some manufacturers still bring up this red herring. Polk has a good reputation so I'm sure they will honor the warranty if you have a receipt that says "New or demo." I always insist on this if I am making a purchase.

Now, I am not an attorney but this is my understanding. These "mouth-breathers" out there are a pain...a hassle in the bargain - is it worth it?
http://pages.ebay.com/help/basics/select-RS.html

please go here and submit to eBay. They take this stuff seriously and WILL take action.
Who is the seller anyway?

-aj
I recently ran into a VERY "funky" situation on Audioweb.

I found a product for sale listed as used that i was not even aware was in production. The seller had a very nice picture of the unit, full description, etc... and the price was right. Checking his feedback, i found three positives with all of them taking place within the last 2 - 3 weeks. I fired off an instant email to him letting him know i was VERY interested in this specific product. I also called his house and left a similar message with all of my pertinent contact info.

After doing this, i went to the company's website and checked to see what i could find out about this piece. While they did show it listed, there was no info available. I ended up calling them up and spoke to their distributor. During the conversation, the distributor mentioned that the unit will be in production at the end of July. HUH ?!?!?!?!

As it turns out, there were only two of these units in existence. The distributor had one to demo to their dealers and the engineers had one to work with. I then made him aware of the unit being advertised on Audioweb for appr 45% of retail. Needless to say, he became rather excited very quickly. He asked for the web address, etc.. and i gladly forwarded the pertinent info. The distributor then contacted the seller privately and who knows what was said between them.

When all was said and done, the seller did not have this unit. His ad disappeared that same day while i was at work. I spoke to the distributor the next day and he did verify that it was a scam. However, the seller did contact me via email and let me know that he had found someone that was interested in it and they were working through a deal. If the deal fell through, he would let me know. There is more to this than i've covered here, but you get the idea.

I forwarded an email to Audioweb questioning them about their policies on fraudulent ads and scammers. That was four days ago and i have not heard a peep back from them.

As such, i'm somewhat torn about what to do about this individual and the over-all situation. Obviously, this person planned on stringing someone ( who knows how many people ) along and probably bilking them for pre-payment and shipping fees. The way he worded his ad, he could simply contact me ( and who knows how many others ) at a later date and say that the original deal fell through. As such, he could sell me the unit but i would have to contact him ASAP as he had others waiting in line for this piece. With that type of a situation at hand, i think that many people would simply jump without thinking and agree to terms just to secure the deal. Know what i mean ???

Any thoughts or suggestions as to what should be done in this situation ? According to the little bit of detective work that i've done, this person does not have an account here on Audiogon. Sean
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