garandman
Bolt Gun Bodacious
I’ve got the Zelle app on my phone but never used it. Does anyone know their position on gun-related transactions?
Zelle is anti- fun.
Just found this;
https://www.guntab.com/payment-platform-firearm-policies
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I’ve got the Zelle app on my phone but never used it. Does anyone know their position on gun-related transactions?
Insurance USPS is 15.00 a 1,000 so that can add up quick, could be a 1,000 rifle or 5,000 makes a difference.You certainly did ! how far did it have to go? I shipped 2 rifles recently both were over $70 with full insurance UPS
Lee
Thanks, Garandman. Maybe we should all sign up for Guntab.
If you paid a fee, you used a credit card right? Call your credit card. Dont tell them you were buying a gun or gun part. Just tell them you sent the money to the wrong person and paypal wont help.
Sure. Yeah. Fuck the Bank. They can take it. Right?
Right???
No. That's bullshit.
Don't LIE and drag down another business with your own LIE.
Just tell the Bank what happened, leave out the gun part thing, and ask what they can do with Paypal. It may be something, it may be nothing, but there's no good reason to stick it to another business.
We do sometimes get different answers from places like Paypal than you do as a consumer. Call it "leverage".
-Nate
Simmer down hot sauce.
That's not what I said, and none of it was a lie. It was the same as your leaving out the gun part. Which is pretty much what I said.
Most instances in a credit card dispute, which is what this is, the bank (actually Visa, Mastercard, discover) will collect the funds from Paypal and Paypal will reverse from the user. No one gets fucked except the person keeping funds not due to them.
Did he not send it to the wrong person? Because he did, and that is NOT a lie. If he said, the seller gave me the wrong address and the money went to the wrong person would that make you sleep better?It IS a lie.
It's the "sent the money to the wrong person" that is the lie. The "gun part", or the good being purchased, whatever it is, is not the Bank's business, so long as it was not in fact delivered to their customer; to a Banker, that is only omission of facts irrelevant to the fraud being committed.
The "wrong person" lie COMPLETELY changes the discussion. It is the difference between the remitter (Bank customer) being an idiot and sending money the wrong place vs and the seller committing fraud.
HUGE difference in how those can be handled with an insurance organization such as FDIC.
-Nate
Use a money order or cashiers check....presto...mailing address...That's part of the problem, his profile isn't complete. The money was sent to an email address.... where are you going to drive to????
DON'T DEAL WITH SOMEONE WITHOUT AN ADDRESS!!!!
Did you buy something from me not as described?like not having a product exactly as described!![]()
Did he not send it to the wrong person? Because he did, and that is NOT a lie.
FYI - The FDIC insures accounts against bank failure, not single fraudulent transactions.
To the Seller,,,,
If you at reading this thread and you are an honest person please speak up here and inform us of your side of the story.
Going on 6 pages of discussion on this topic obviously members here are interested...
Thanks,
George
Did you buy something from me not as described?
@natdscott how is it lying if we don’t know if the seller committed fraud? What if it’s literally how events played out and there was a typo in the email and it went to the wrong person? How would that be lying? With all the facts presented that’s the most likely case.
All the seller has to say (I don’t agree with it) is well sucks to be you. You should have confirmed the recipient before hitting that send button. The seller technically doesn’t have to do anything. I think the seller *should* fix the issue since he started it with the typo, but the OP is somewhat responsible for not confirming before sending. As far as the seller is concerned no money = no product. How does he know that the OP isn’t lying to him about the sent money? Or that the OP hasn’t already gotten back?
I’m on the OPs side, here, I’m just playing devils advocate. There’s two sides to everything, but there is definitely a better of the two sides if the actions went down as the OP described.
Everything that I said is the truth, I have all the PM's from him. I copied and pasted the PayPal address he gave me. I have a PM where he said I made a mistake and misspelled the address.
I talked to Gate City my bank and there treating it as fraud. They are a good banking system, and I believe I will get my money back. I didnt think about contacting my bank till someone said I should.