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I need help for a friend who got scam by a coin shop
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<p>[QUOTE="windwalker, post: 1681990, member: 38923"]If a person sits on a problem it doesn't get better on its own. There has been more than sufficient time passing between the purchase of these coins and today to cause a person to think that while something may been done badly, the lapse on the purchaser's part (for whatever good reason she may have had) in getting this resolved has caused so many problems with the fiasco that the dealer's return policy is most likely way passed the drop dead date. </p><p><br /></p><p>The woman now has no leg to stand on that to try a drum a moral outrage for an old woman supposedly done wrong. </p><p><br /></p><p>If this has been done to most people (being supposedly taken for $5,000 or whatever) would have been #1 on our list of things to do for today not 3 weeks later or quite possibly a month or more.</p><p><br /></p><p>Since she was offered the help of the OP and she choose to entertain 100+ unexpected guests invited by her husband she is now quite likely to be in the unenviable position of "out of luck". She has taken to long to resolve the situation. Most companies have a return policy that they will gladly stand behindl, but most small businesses don't have an open-ended return policy like Sears where you can come back years later.</p><p><br /></p><p>Those coins are hers and the OP can demand her satisfaction but he is whistling up a rope. He's a nice guy, but she really is putting him in a position where now he is looking like he's more than a day late in coming to her defense (if she ever had one). Those coins are hers now until the cows are sent to market. She has no one to blame for this but either herself or her husband's surprise 100+ guests.</p><p><br /></p><p>How does the dealer know if the coins that she is now crying about are part of the original sale and a scam is being pulled on him.</p><p><br /></p><p>If she was my grandmother, I would have taken care of this a lot sooner than today or some future date. I have seen some smart little old ladies in my time who if they didn't get their way would pull the little old lady crying scene in hopes of getting her way. Now it is just to late for this and the coin are hers until she decides to sell them.</p><p><br /></p><p>Stick a fork in her - she's done.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="windwalker, post: 1681990, member: 38923"]If a person sits on a problem it doesn't get better on its own. There has been more than sufficient time passing between the purchase of these coins and today to cause a person to think that while something may been done badly, the lapse on the purchaser's part (for whatever good reason she may have had) in getting this resolved has caused so many problems with the fiasco that the dealer's return policy is most likely way passed the drop dead date. The woman now has no leg to stand on that to try a drum a moral outrage for an old woman supposedly done wrong. If this has been done to most people (being supposedly taken for $5,000 or whatever) would have been #1 on our list of things to do for today not 3 weeks later or quite possibly a month or more. Since she was offered the help of the OP and she choose to entertain 100+ unexpected guests invited by her husband she is now quite likely to be in the unenviable position of "out of luck". She has taken to long to resolve the situation. Most companies have a return policy that they will gladly stand behindl, but most small businesses don't have an open-ended return policy like Sears where you can come back years later. Those coins are hers and the OP can demand her satisfaction but he is whistling up a rope. He's a nice guy, but she really is putting him in a position where now he is looking like he's more than a day late in coming to her defense (if she ever had one). Those coins are hers now until the cows are sent to market. She has no one to blame for this but either herself or her husband's surprise 100+ guests. How does the dealer know if the coins that she is now crying about are part of the original sale and a scam is being pulled on him. If she was my grandmother, I would have taken care of this a lot sooner than today or some future date. I have seen some smart little old ladies in my time who if they didn't get their way would pull the little old lady crying scene in hopes of getting her way. Now it is just to late for this and the coin are hers until she decides to sell them. Stick a fork in her - she's done.[/QUOTE]
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I need help for a friend who got scam by a coin shop
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