If the seller really owns the car he will have some documentation, have
him fax or email a scan of the title.
Mike
At 06:20 AM 12/8/2006, Joe Savard wrote:
In a message dated
12/8/2006 4:05:31 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, mjh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
writes:
- What am I missing here? I have
been on ebay for 10 years, but have not purchased a car on ebay. I
am quite well aware of the scams and fraudulent car auctions, and have
told my dad that's what I think this is - a scam. The price is too
low, the deal is too good, the auction was terminated, and that's not how
ebay works. Yet he remains convinced the seller and car are
legit. Is it possible he's right?
-
- Thanks for your comments,
-
- Mark mjh
- Sutherlin, OR
- '57 Fury
Mark,
I agree with you. The deal just looked "Too good to be
true". Another thing that I noticed about the actual ad was
that NO MATTER WHERE I clicked on the ad, a pre-addressed email form
popped up, addressed to the seller. I've never seen this behavior
in an Ebay ad, and it even led me to speculating that it might be
counterfeit.
All that being said, if the selling price was genuine and the car really
as stated, I feel like the very dickens for missing it!
Good luck to your father!
Joe Savard
Lake Orion, Michigan
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