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My point is, the market doesn't care about your determination or that of anyone else's. It cares about the number on the slab. |
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All these defenders of altered cards remind me of Chinese knock off salesmen.
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Travis I agree with you there are a lot of people who don't care. But especially with vintage collectors, I think there is still a substantial group that does, and who would not knowingly pay market price for a card identified as altered. Therefore, alteration is still a material fact. |
By the way, I just looked at the sentencing memorandum Mastro himself submitted. Yep, it too discusses the Wagner, adding to the incontrovertible proof that it was indeed part of the case and what he was charged with and pleaded to, although not (as I have acknowledged throughout) the primary focus.
Although the vast majority of the offense conduct concerns shill bidding, Bill has also accepted responsibility for his role in the sales of two authentic items whose condition or appearance was altered. First, Bill acknowledged having personally altered one item, the T-206 Honus Wagner card, by cutting its side borders. (Plea Agr. (Doc. No. 99) at 12-13). Bill voluntarily waived the statute of limitations to acknowledge this conduct. Although the Wagner card was authentic, Bill was not honest about the alteration when he sold it and for years afterward. Bill has now fully disclosed and accepted responsibility for the alteration, and the Wagner card remains one of the most valued items of sports memorabilia, having resold since these allegations became widely publicized for its highest price ever. |
Damage to a collectible is relevant to value. Value usually goes down with damage. Missing pieces of a card is very, very obviously damage.
If alteration is not relevant to value or sales, if it does not affect prices, then 1) we wouldn't have a big majority of hobbyists thinking it relevant and 2) the pro-fraud wing of the hobby would not need to cover up their trimming; they could freely disclose it to no negative impact. Why don't they? Because it's bad and harms value. This shit isn't difficult. If you need to cover it up, it's material. If it's material, it needs to be disclosed whether it is a car, a baseball card, or anything else. Personally, I don't really care if a card I buy is micro trimmed. It's slotted into my set and I'll enjoy it the same. But it's obviously material and if I covered up trimming when selling a card, I'd be committing fraud by hiding and not disclosing relevant information about the item. The world doesn't revolve around my personal narrative and what I like. Just a smidgeon of honesty and common sense goes a long way. If my dumbass can figure this out, I'm sure our resident pro-fraud 'hobbyists' that spend most of their posts explaining how fraud and scamming is fine can figure it out too. |
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We all have opinions, what is is not necessarily what should be, but what is is the realm of actual, verifiable and ascertainable fact. It amazes me how many people will insist X or Y is or is not in a document that they are unable or unwilling to read. No one has ever won an argument by virtue of their illiteracy. I expect a small number of hobbyists to openly support fraud and a much larger number to quietly and tacitly support fraud that benefits them and their buddies, but I would hope that these people would be able to avoid the stupid trap of insisting and doubling down on provably false claims to fact. Clearly they are too fucking dumb to do even that. |
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I'm no lawyer, but when I read through discussions of this topic on the Blowhard forums a few years back, I seem to recall most of the lawyers there were in agreement that he had not in fact been charged with any crimes in relation to the Wagner card. But rather it was brought up during the trial as a mere testimony to his character, or lack thereof. Him basically just trying to come clean with anything and everything he could in an effort to gain favor and get a more lenient sentence. But he was not directly charged with a crime for anything related to the Wagner. You mention that he admitted to trimming the Wagner in his plea deal, but that plea deal was rejected by the judge. He was not sentenced for anything to do with the Wagner. |
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And it’s funny how there was no response to this question posted earlier: But my question for you is this… if there was no shill bidding and just the trimming, does this case still result in a plea deal? |
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I still believe that his admission into trimming the Wagner had some bearing on his conviction, do to concealment, just not nearly as much weight as the shill bidding price manipulation scheme/fraud.’ |
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Now if you said that PSA or SGC or Beckett Can't tell from a cursory 30 second look, that I could agree with. If you look at the work done by groups and people that actually know what they're doing and take the time to get it right You'll see what's possible. Do things slip through? Of course, but far less than they do at any grading company. I may just have to use the method in the video and take good pics of the resulting edge compared to a factory edge. I believe it will be 100% detectable. The same for his half assed "reglossing" using wax paper. That should be and is entirely detectable if you take any time at all. |
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The part I made bold is ALL that matters and it is fairly easy to get altered/counterfeit cards in those magic plastic slabs and it HAS been proven countless times. |
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The expert did in fact get them both right in a very short time. (Turned out I was right about both, one very good the other not so much) The good one has a cert now, the altered one is in the "what the heck do I do with it? " box. Getting the official cert actually took about 3 months, since the process is much more than a cursory glance. A decade + later, I'm much better at spotting problems, and a whole lot more confident in my own opinions. But I've seen a display done by the group that does the certs, of loads of bad stuff they've caught. Alterations, repairs, outright fakes, many of them so well done that it's very hard to tell. Which is why they take months. |
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Again, from the US Attorney's office:
According to the indictment, in advertising portraying Mastro Auctions as the premier seller of valuable items, including the world’s most expensive baseball trading card, a Honus Wagner T-206 card, Mastro allegedly failed to disclose that he had altered the Wagner T-206 card by cutting the sides in a manner that, if disclosed, would have significantly reduced the value of the card. The charges allege that Mastro and Allen caused the sale of certain items knowing that their authenticity and condition were misrepresented to customers, including purported hair of Elvis Presley and a purported 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings trophy baseball. For those of you who apparently don't understand this, the indictment is the document setting forth the criminal charges. |
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Well yes, but a company they like or people they like (or themselves) engage in this activity, and so indictments must be ignored alongside the text of the laws and the definition of criminal fraud itself so they can claim their boys didn't do nothing. Arguing that things should be restructured so that trimming without disclosure is not fraud would at least not require being blatantly factually wrong, but that angle isn't perfect for the agenda, so it won't be used. Instead, just double down on factually incorrect claims to fact. That's the ticket. |
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The denial and contrarian and counterfactual bullshit on this thread top anything I have seen yet on Net 54. |
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Speaking of the actual indictment: 11. It was further part of the scheme that in marketing materials distributed on behalf of Mastro Auctions, which were intended to portray Mastro Auctions to potential bidders and consignors as a premier seller of valuable items for which a strong market existed, defendant MASTRO represented that Mastro Auctions had sold the most expensive baseball card in the world, a Honus Wagner T-206 card. In making this representation, however, defendant MASTRO knowingly omitted the material fact that defendant MASTRO had altered the baseball card by cutting the sides of the card in a manner that, if disclosed, would have significantly reduced the value of the card. You probably don't need to be a lawyer to understand what "It was further part of the scheme" means. Anyone still want to claim he wasn't charged with selling an altered card without disclosure? |
Card Needed Here. And popcorn ?
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I would add that the intentional misrepresentation or omission of a material fact is actionable as civil fraud, and has been for more than the nearly 40 years I have been practicing in Arizona. I am confident that the law is similar in all states. Moreover, apart from being a common law cause of action, many states have statutes on the books for consumer fraud. Arizona at least has a broad view of what conduct can fall within the statute and even allows such claims to be proven by the far less stringent burden of proof-- preponderance of the evidence. Heck, in theory the Attorney General here is authorized to investigate and pursue claims for consumer fraud, and it is not taken lightly, although the politics and resources involved in those decisions are always in play. The law addresses “any deception, unfair act or practice, false statement, false pretense, false promise or misrepresentation” and is actionable if relied upon by the plaintiff/victim, regardless of whether such reliance was reasonable.
In sum, to suggest that card alteration is only morally wrong but cannot comprise a crime or other unlawful conduct is just simply incorrect. {redundant for emphasis} |
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The day when altered numerically graded cards (by respected TPG) are sold with full disclosure for consistently the same amount as an unaltered example in the same grade will be the time we can all agree that doctoring cards is accepted in the hobby. Until then I call utter BS on those who are advocating or defending it. Maybe that is because they themselves dabble in fixing cardboard. :confused: Kudos to them, however, for at least admitting they are ok with it. Takes some guts to do that so they have my respect from that POV. |
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Let's be clear. There is no difference of "opinion" about the Mastro case. What there is, is blatant and disingenuous misrepresentation of the factual record, even in the face of the operative documents.
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But this is a good example of why SCR is so immature and insufferable at the same time at the 9 minute mark. “I’ll tell you something right now, if this guy ever approached me at a card show or anywhere else, he’d get dealt with real quick [cuts to video clip of 2 men shooting sub machine guns into a store]” Really? Death threats? Hard to claim the moral high ground while implying you’ll shoot everyone. |
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"Under claims of violations involving the Illinois Consumer Fraud Act, Forman now says Mastro made unauthorized bids to raise prices during its auctions using Forman’s account as well as those of other, unnamed individuals." (https://www.sportscollectorsdaily.co...-counter-suit/) Seems that Forman's name was out there, but Forman alleged that Mastro used Foreman's account without his knowing to place said shill bids when he filed his suit against Mastro. |
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I was corrected by the evidentiary record (because, of course, there is an actual reality outside of what I think or recall). Only shilling Steve's lots, so clearly not the houses using bidders accounts without their cognizance. The house would shill things not owned by the hijacked accounts family members.
https://haulsofshame.com/blog/wp-con...l-bid-list.pdf |
Steve being Steve Forman.
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wtf
Just when I thought it would be difficult to get more cynical, a thread like this reminds me to hold my beer. Intelligent people actually have to spend time arguing with any adult -- presumably capable of critical thinking and accepting of other norms like the merits of pissing into a urinal instead of the floor -- that knowingly selling trimmed cards without disclosure is both acceptable and legal? At some point you walk past the land of "hey, we can all have differences of opinion" and enter into familiar territory of good old fashioned idiocy.
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No one has ever, to our knowledge, been convicted of fraud (or any other charges for that matter) for trimming and selling cards. It is what it is, and pretending as if that's not the reality we all live in is not helpful. It is just wishful thinking. Let's get one thing straight though, since some here wish to put words in my mouth that don't belong there. I do not condone trimming cards. As I have said repeatedly, I think it is unethical and a shitty thing to do. |
I see you've now backed off your claim that the Wagner was only something "brought up later." Progress. :)
Mastronet sold the Wagner in 2000. http://www.t206museum.com/page/periodical_3.html In any event, the indictment is not charging him with fraud in connection with the sale to Copeland, it's talking about Mastro Auctions marketing materials which allegedly misrepresented or concealed material facts about the Wagner. Was it a weak claim, could he have prevailed at trial? Maybe so. My only point is that the assertion was made here that the Mastro case did not involve a charge concerning the Wagner and I posted relevant documents to show that it did. Again, it was not the focus of the case, for sure. And how do you think he was sentenced if he didn't plead guilty? Yes, initially the judge rejected the parties' sentencing proposal, that doesn't mean the substance of the plea agreement was abrogated. You can't sentence someone without a guilty plea or verdict. That's why the official press release from the government continues to refer to the substance of the plea agreement. Or maybe a new one saying the same substantive things was substituted, I would have to check the docket, but it's irrelevant. I have never claimed the Wagner was a factor in the length of the sentence. I would have to go back and see if the record reflects that one way or the other (and I doubt it was a factor) but it's unimportant to my point. And you still are ducking MY question, which is why, if there is no conceivable crime for selling an altered card without disclosure, did the FBI investigate for several years, issue scads of subpoenas, etc.? That is all. |
Out of curiosity, because this thread has me thinking; what is the consensus on cutting cards from a vintage uncut sheet? I'm positive that it has been done in the past, but is it widely accepted and condoned? Or is the general consensus, leave history (the cards) as it is?
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What I have noticed is that even though I say when I sell sheet cut card or cards I know or believe to be altered when the buyer resells them they ALWAYS forget to note the card(s) are altered/sheet cut. |
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The place I worked for had a foot press that cut round corners that was made around 1910. And the leather guy I shared a shop with for a while had a similar press. Paper cutters are readily available, but ones like the factories used aren't small. They'd fit pretty well in a garage, though. |
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My argument since the beginning though was that they would eventually discover that their views are not shared by the majority. I forget who it was, but one of the larger hobby content creators recently shared that they ran a poll with their audience and were shocked to learn that 30% of their followers thought it was perfectly acceptable behavior and saw nothing wrong with it whatsoever. And those are people *in this hobby*. Add in the percentage of collectors who are on the fence about it, and those who think it's unethical but not criminal, and then extrapolate that data to people *outside* the hobby, and it becomes quite clear that getting a jury to buy your argument and actually convict someone of fraud is an uphill battle. |
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Much of the non-Mastro conversation in this thread sounds familiar.
Discussions about card doctors and the alterations they perform (and, by extension, the altered cards) seem similar to late '90s conversations regarding PEDs. Fans were excited, nearly everyone was making money, and some players were able to have (or continue) careers they otherwise wouldn't. To those who cared to look a bit more deeply, though, it was clear something was wrong. At the time, baseballs were soaring over the outfield walls with alarming regularity. It was normal, even acceptable, to a large portion of baseball fans. However, there was ample evidence some of the players were cheating to gain an edge. Among other things, their bodies exhibited traits (such as an increased head size) that simply wouldn't occur naturally. The long-term impact to the sport still isn't fully known. Steroid use continues to be a relevant (and divisive, at times) issue. That sure sounds familiar. Let me try something. Collectors were excited, nearly everyone was making money, and some dealers were able to have (or continue) careers they otherwise wouldn't. To those who cared to look a bit more deeply, though, it was clear something was wrong. At the time, vintage cards were getting high grades from the TPGs with alarming regularity. It was normal, even acceptable, to a large portion of baseball card collectors. However, there was ample evidence some of the submitters were cheating to gain an edge. Among other things, their cards exhibited traits (such as a decrease in size) that simply wouldn't occur naturally. The long-term impact to the hobby still isn't fully known. Card doctoring continues to be a relevant (and divisive, at times) issue. Uncanny, isn't it? |
For what it is worth a Ringer Podcast Called Sport Cards Nonsense interviewed Evan yesterday. It is about 15 minutes generally at the start of the podcast.
The hosts are not genially vintage guys. |
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Like trimming, I think it's bad. Ruining items for profit is not the act of a collector but a profiteer. It sucks when it turns out the cool miscut on eBay one buys was actually made by some asshole at home. It sucks more when they are historical sheets, unique or nearly unique and instructive about the history and process of the card creation. A majority of T card uncut material that survived into the profiteer era has already been destroyed or further cut up (T204, the alleged Wagner/Plank panel, T25 panels, etc.). The interest of profiteers and hobbyists is fundamentally opposed here. The tiny bits remaining are only protected, at most, until their owners pass and the sheets sell to be destroyed. It really sucks when history is destroyed for a few bucks. |
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What's interesting though is that in other hobbies, alterations and restorations are disclosed with pride. In the casino chip collecting world, the words "cleaned and oiled" will often even result in a slightly higher price than chips which haven't been restored. |
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A large public outlash would very strongly suggest that alteration is material. Yes, it is the scammers who are the victim when people say they should be held accountable for their frauds :rolleyes:.
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Mathis on the interview circuit now. I haven't listened to it but it's been summarized as a lot of rationalization.
https://open.spotify.com/episode/6Ql...SvWU4XRkF4DQGg |
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I'm vaguely familiar with the Wagner/Plank Sheet, but do you have a link to the post that summarizes this story. Also correct me if I'm wrong, did Rosen ever find an uncut sheet of 52 topps and then cut them himself? I can't remember. Thank you, |
I quit reading at some point but could someone please tell this idiot that not everything is an opinion. a fact is not a god damn opinion you f’ing moron.
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The definition of fraud, and mail and wire fraud, is also a matter of fact. Of course, when one asks whether it SHOULD be applied to prosecute card doctoring, then one is in the realm of opinion. |
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