Coastie6
FNG
- Joined
- Feb 2, 2022
- Messages
- 27
Long true story. Just a warning about PayPal and F&F. About six years ago, long-time buddy of mine sold a firearm on GunBroker. Foolishly, he agreed to accept PP F&F as payment. Whether you like it or not, PayPal explicitly forbids their platform from being used for payment on "weapons". Their sandbox I guess.
Fast forward several weeks. He gets a call from his wife saying, "the mortgage check bounced!". Come to find out, the buyer had developed a case of buyers remorse as the firearm buying fever frenzy caused by a political blip was winding down and these rifles were starting to show back up on the shelves of LGS. Turns out, he filed a claim for a fraudulent charge to his credit card and PayPal. So, PayPal pulled the funds from my buddy's account until they sorted things out. My buddy has to come clean with PayPal and send him info on the GunBroker transaction. After like exactly one minute, they say, "too bad so sad, you violated our policy. Go pound sand!".
Now is when it gets interesting. My buddy tries calling and emailing the buyer, radio silence for 4-days. Now, what this dumb a** buyer didn't think of is the rifle was shipped by and FFL to an FFL in his town so theres a pretty solid paper trail indicating this was NOT a fraudulent charge. We contacted his FFL and verified he'd picked up the rifle. After dozens of attempts to contact the buyer to arrange for the return of the firearm I told my buddy to pull up the buyers address on Google Maps zoom in on his house and take a screen shot. I then told him email it to the buyer telling him you just wanted to confirm it was his residence as you'd be coming with a few buddies and the local and federal authorities as he was now in possession of a stolen firearm. The buyer was only 5-hours away in a bordering state. Amazingly, he got a phone call from the buyer in minutes after sending the email! Now, it still took weeks to get his rifle back. The buyer shipped it to our local FFL without the required copy of his drivers license so our LGS had to sit on it for over a week until he finally faxed a copy. Additionally, the Jackwagon did minor damage to one of the rifle's components. Obviously on purpose.
Moral of the story, be VERY careful what you accept PayPal, especially F&F for. If you violate their "no weapons policy" you'll be swinging in the wind with no recourse and F&F has absolutely no buyer or seller protection. It's not needed if it's being used for what it's intended. This is also a good reason to setup a separate checking account to tie these online forms of payment to. As easily as they can deposit into them, they can withdraw. Hate for anyone's mortgage check to bounce.
Fast forward several weeks. He gets a call from his wife saying, "the mortgage check bounced!". Come to find out, the buyer had developed a case of buyers remorse as the firearm buying fever frenzy caused by a political blip was winding down and these rifles were starting to show back up on the shelves of LGS. Turns out, he filed a claim for a fraudulent charge to his credit card and PayPal. So, PayPal pulled the funds from my buddy's account until they sorted things out. My buddy has to come clean with PayPal and send him info on the GunBroker transaction. After like exactly one minute, they say, "too bad so sad, you violated our policy. Go pound sand!".
Now is when it gets interesting. My buddy tries calling and emailing the buyer, radio silence for 4-days. Now, what this dumb a** buyer didn't think of is the rifle was shipped by and FFL to an FFL in his town so theres a pretty solid paper trail indicating this was NOT a fraudulent charge. We contacted his FFL and verified he'd picked up the rifle. After dozens of attempts to contact the buyer to arrange for the return of the firearm I told my buddy to pull up the buyers address on Google Maps zoom in on his house and take a screen shot. I then told him email it to the buyer telling him you just wanted to confirm it was his residence as you'd be coming with a few buddies and the local and federal authorities as he was now in possession of a stolen firearm. The buyer was only 5-hours away in a bordering state. Amazingly, he got a phone call from the buyer in minutes after sending the email! Now, it still took weeks to get his rifle back. The buyer shipped it to our local FFL without the required copy of his drivers license so our LGS had to sit on it for over a week until he finally faxed a copy. Additionally, the Jackwagon did minor damage to one of the rifle's components. Obviously on purpose.
Moral of the story, be VERY careful what you accept PayPal, especially F&F for. If you violate their "no weapons policy" you'll be swinging in the wind with no recourse and F&F has absolutely no buyer or seller protection. It's not needed if it's being used for what it's intended. This is also a good reason to setup a separate checking account to tie these online forms of payment to. As easily as they can deposit into them, they can withdraw. Hate for anyone's mortgage check to bounce.