drakagem4a1
Junior Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? KY
Some of you all may have heard of these guys, apparently they have scammed people all over the country, and have what sounds like quite a few people working for them.
I was approached in a parking lot by a couple guys in a white 99-04 chevy tahoe, and the passenger asked if i would be interested in a home theater system that retails for $2995. i didnt believe it at first, and wasnt interested at all, but he was pretty persistent, and i figured i'd just take a look out of curiosity. Well, he had about 30 boxes of speakers in the back of his truck, and told me how excited they were that they ended with one extra set of speakers, and wanted to get rid of them quick to make a buck, instead of taking it back to his boss because his boss would keep them. I offered him $200 for the system, and he somehow convinced me that $400 was a better idea. I drove to the ATM, gave them the cash, and thought I was getting a great deal, and how i couldnt wait to see what they were going for on ebay.
well I got home, and found nothing but scam alerts on this b/s from all over the country. after doing some research i found this article:
Rip Off Report: By Consumers, For Consumers Michael J. Amoroso - Dynalab - JAM - Garrett Distributing - Millenium Speakers White Van Speaker Scam - Took almost $500 bydeceptive business practices Yorba Linda Chino Hills California
basically, the article states hoe someone had investigated this big scam operation, and found all the known business names and phone numbers, as well as the private address of the peice of crap responsible for all these people getting scammed.
what I'm getting at, is that this guy that wrote the article makes it sound all too easy to file a small claim with the guy that lives at that address, and win it in court. is this at all possible? thank you.What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)?
Some of you all may have heard of these guys, apparently they have scammed people all over the country, and have what sounds like quite a few people working for them.
I was approached in a parking lot by a couple guys in a white 99-04 chevy tahoe, and the passenger asked if i would be interested in a home theater system that retails for $2995. i didnt believe it at first, and wasnt interested at all, but he was pretty persistent, and i figured i'd just take a look out of curiosity. Well, he had about 30 boxes of speakers in the back of his truck, and told me how excited they were that they ended with one extra set of speakers, and wanted to get rid of them quick to make a buck, instead of taking it back to his boss because his boss would keep them. I offered him $200 for the system, and he somehow convinced me that $400 was a better idea. I drove to the ATM, gave them the cash, and thought I was getting a great deal, and how i couldnt wait to see what they were going for on ebay.
well I got home, and found nothing but scam alerts on this b/s from all over the country. after doing some research i found this article:
Rip Off Report: By Consumers, For Consumers Michael J. Amoroso - Dynalab - JAM - Garrett Distributing - Millenium Speakers White Van Speaker Scam - Took almost $500 bydeceptive business practices Yorba Linda Chino Hills California
basically, the article states hoe someone had investigated this big scam operation, and found all the known business names and phone numbers, as well as the private address of the peice of crap responsible for all these people getting scammed.
what I'm getting at, is that this guy that wrote the article makes it sound all too easy to file a small claim with the guy that lives at that address, and win it in court. is this at all possible? thank you.What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)?