laterob
Not THAT Bad of a guy...
Not what I am saying, Ben. Calm down. When was the email sent with the pic that went unanswered? We're there attempted calls?
Ummm... Why is everyone ignoring the immediate PayPal claim? I see a lot of nitpicking on details, but that's the one piece of actual evidence that's been posted, and it very much supports the seller's story.
Not what I am saying, Ben. Calm down. When was the email sent with the pic that went unanswered? We're there attempted calls?
How does it support the seller's story? At best, it could possibly show that the OP is impatient for not waiting longer while his email was being ignored. As there's no time stamp on the dispute, we don't even know how "immediate" it was. It could very well have been posted late in the evening.
What if 'unauthorized 'transaction' is the only form of dispute for a gift?
Maybe you should try to grasp the situation, before commenting. The chameleon was received on the 29th of May, and the OP's email complaint was apparently ignored. No idea what you're seeing, but what I'm seeing, doesn't do anything to discredit the OP.Yeah, you need to look at it again. It clearly shows that payment was made on the 28th and the claim was filed on the 29th.
Maybe you should try to grasp the situation, before commenting. The chameleon was received on the 29th of May, and the OP's email complaint was apparently ignored. No idea what you're seeing, but what I'm seeing, doesn't do anything to discredit the OP.
Maybe you should use some common sense. How could the OP know that his complaint was being ignored in less than a full day?
Ben, IF the buyer is telling the truth that he wasn't told about the huge scar wouldn't you have done the same thing? What could the seller possibly have said to make it okay?
Maybe you should use some common sense. How could the OP know that his complaint was being ignored in less than a full day?
How fast do these burns heal? Is it possible that the burn could've happened in the time that the OP had the animal? This I don't know, and won't make any inferences because of my lack of knowledge.
And to clarify my position before I walk away, I'm not supporting the Seller either in this. They're both wrong. OP was stupid, seller didn't do what he needed to do to support his claims that the OP was aware of the condition of the animal, at this point we can go around and around picking sides but to me they're both to be avoided.
I think you're doing a bang-up job of illustrating just how uncommon sense actually is. You're downplaying the glaring (and supremely unlikely) idiocy that the seller has displayed, while focusing on one of the OP's actions that was apparently precipitated by the seller's actions. As there's not even the slightest guarantee of winning, the simple act of filing a PayPal dispute doesn't even come close to making someone appear to be pulling a scam. If/when he gets his money back AND refuses to return the animal, then he looks bad. Until then, you're just grasping at straws.
It's funny that you openly admit to defrauding PayPal out of their fees, but want to paint the OP as the Bad Guy for how he's dealt with the PayPal side of things. In using the "gift" option for business transactions, you're also lying to PayPal, are you not?