Romano brothers coin scam

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Lord Geoff, Jun 1, 2015.

  1. 19Lyds

    19Lyds Member of the United States of Confusion

    You are soooo bad!

    But, that'll never happen since the Fruit Loops Toucan would protest with extreme prejudice!
     
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  3. statequarterguy

    statequarterguy Love Pucks

    That Vanity Fair cover got my attention this morning, until I found out who she was.

    I don't know, could she ever be America's sweetheart?
     
  4. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    Yeah, I'd hate to see Toucan Sam displaced.
     
  5. Brett_in_Sacto

    Brett_in_Sacto Well-Known Member

    Everyone in that family has outlived their fame. Disgusting, the whole lot of them.
     
  6. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    Ya think?

    And the thread has been completely and utterly hijacked. Sorry OP. To put things back on track I once knew a guy named Romano. He used to break legs........
     
    Lord Geoff likes this.
  7. Brett_in_Sacto

    Brett_in_Sacto Well-Known Member

    I think I had that guy's cheese once. It was graded as top notch! It probably received a higher grade than it should have, and I know I overpaid for it. I was scammed by Romano. (Thread back on track!)
     
    treylxapi47 and green18 like this.
  8. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    Angel-hair......
     
  9. statequarterguy

    statequarterguy Love Pucks

    Man, you guys are making me hungry for pasta. Think I'll head to the kitchen.
     
  10. Stephan77

    Stephan77 Well-Known Member

    Buying coins from telemarketers? For some reason, it doesn't strike me as a very good idea.
     
  11. Brett_in_Sacto

    Brett_in_Sacto Well-Known Member

    Better than buying insurance from the government... But I digress... :)
     
    Randy Abercrombie likes this.
  12. imrich

    imrich Supporter! Supporter

    I believe if you compare the mechanism used in the PCI action to that used by the Federal Trade Commission in 1990 against PCGS, which merely ended in a consent decree, there's reasonable opinion that the PCGS outcome would have been similar if the PCI action mechanism would have been applied. The FTC didn't apply linkage to an established Federal criminal precedent (e.g. RICO), but merely pursued a Civil filing, which allowed a relatively diminished outcome/action.

    It's understood the key element in determining damages is the conformance to a specific published standard, regardless of who is the TPG, with any individual(s) knowing/violating that standard in the sale of a commodity, without proper disclosure.

    In my opinion, from reading public documents, the PCI action was a legal "perfect storm", where TPG, intermediaries, and sales personnel, knew the grade standard, without disclosure to the purchaser. The prosecutor used other recognized TPG and intermediaries as "experts" to establish the degree of violation, and value of damages.

    It's reasonable to expect that a similar action in the future, regardless of defendants perceived qualifications, would have a similar outcome when actions are weighed against a written published standard. A new precedent seemingly has been established. Caveat Venditor!

    JMHO
     
    silentnviolent likes this.
  13. Burton Strauss III

    Burton Strauss III Brother can you spare a trime? Supporter

    I read the findings and I think differently.

    The other TPGs and experts were used to establish that PCI's grades were bunk, but that's not really the key in the findings... The key item was that PCI was not the "independent" arbitrator it was portrayed to be by the salesmen. He hid the relationship and actively lied about it.
     
  14. silentnviolent

    silentnviolent accumulator--selling--make an offer I can't refuse

  15. Brian Calvert

    Brian Calvert Active Member

    Watching this yet again. Scum bags are what these guys are. Typical New York gumba's who dont want to work a real job or start a legit business. THe biggest thing in the whole setup is the customer. THese guys are great at picking out the diamond in the rough, the sucker, they know people very well and those that are not smart enough to notice a scam or trusting enough to fall for it. THeir scale - into the millions is what brought the attention of FBI...
     
  16. Cyndi Dee

    Cyndi Dee New Member

    If you don't want it if you're not knowledgeable about it then don't buy it it's your own stupid fault!
     
  17. Cyndi Dee

    Cyndi Dee New Member

    If you don't want it if you're not knowledgeable about it they did not force you to buy them you buy the coins throughout your own stupidity so whose fault is that your own dumb fault
     
  18. Cyndi Dee

    Cyndi Dee New Member

    They were most certainly not New York Goombas why edited you're just stereotyping them nobody was ever forced to buy coins they should have been a little bit more knowledgeable with the money that they were spending on these coins. Who stupid fault is that they had good sales people and dumb buyers that's your only fault
     
    Last edited by a moderator: May 9, 2018
  19. Sullysullinburg

    Sullysullinburg Well-Known Member

    So I have a question, from what I’ve seen in this thread, they were charged with Mail Fraud. So, hypothically, if they used a shipping service like Fedex or UPS, would they have gotten of scott free?
     
  20. paddyman98

    paddyman98 I'm a professional expert in specializing! Supporter

    And who are you and why are you so interested in this old thread? o_O
     
    C-B-D and mynamespat like this.
  21. mynamespat

    mynamespat Well-Known Member

    On the plus side, I hadn't read this thread before. It's an interesting read. I appreciate the bump.
     
    Randy Abercrombie and paddyman98 like this.
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