I asked a guy with a bunch of big game trophy mounts if he had killed all of them. He said that he had killed one just like each of them but not those and that soon as a guy dies, his widow puts his stuff in a yard sale and that he bought them for a tenth of what it would have cost to mount his own.
True. I got a buddy sells a lot of moose mounts. He gets them from a couple taxidermists that get them dropped off with a deposit and when there done and the bills due they ain't got it. So then he buys em and sells em. Me I'd rather have moose deer bear buffalo elk etc in my freezer then on my wall any day
I like "Could use a good cleaning but I leave that to the new owner to enjoy" Enough so you know she doesn't know about coins but hurry now because she might just clean it.
It appears that she canceled all bids and stated in a revision that no one should bid on it while she has it checked out. Sounds to me like an honest mistake on her part.
I see that. So why doesn't she just cancel the listing? I'm not familiar with eBay listing rules. If she cancels the listing, will she still have to pay the listing fees?
I don't know if she would, either. But, this way since it appears that she now has questions about authenticity if she could get the coin authenticated she wouldn't have to relist and possibly pay a second listing fee.
After I posted by reply, I started to think about this. IMO, she should have to cancel and re-list it. I don't care if she gets charged for second listing. Maybe it will prevent her/them from listing fake objects as genuine BEFORE doing their homework.
I'm not familiar with the concept of honest shill bidding. Could you maybe explain this concept to me?