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A counterfeiters dream
Someone listed a huge lot of PSA legit labels from cracked out slabs in L.A.s
craigslist, to me it represents a great danger to the hobby! and at the very list a disturbance to the pop report. http://i1188.photobucket.com/albums/...ps52d6f54c.png |
Damn! That's a lot of flips!:eek::eek:
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My God that is one of the worst things I have ever seen on this sight. I wish there was a way the FBI would step in and grab this away from him. Or someone would buy this and destroy it I would throw in on it to make this go away. Seriously troubling.
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I would expect PSA them self to purchase this lot then destroy them. Maybe it's just me but it could be a nightmare for them if these get used on put into the market place. A small amount of money to spend to avoid negative publicity if they are used. I know some will say they can't purchase every flip, but this would qualify as a rare situation. I would say give the guy $1000 worth of grading, but as you can see I don't think this guy likes graded cards.
Mike |
Slips
Not sure if the seller is doing anything illegal here, but I have to believe that he or she knows why one would be motivated to buy...
Does anyone here have a contact at psa that can be alerted? |
loser
There sure are a lot of losers and crooks in the world.
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At this rate, I can't help but wonder if the on-line buying of graded cards will at some point become riskier than buying raw.....
There's too much money to be made and apparently no legal consequences. |
It kind of reminds me of this thread from a few months ago when one of our own board members was trying to sell flips and cracked slabs on eBay. Fortunately, eBay cancelled the listing.
http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=172405 |
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Does Craigslist have a way to report listings that misrepresent the item?
The listing reads, "...PSA/SMR value of these labels is over $1,000,000." Wrong. The PSA/SMR value would be for the graded cards. Best regards, Eric |
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A couple more thoughts... A ) How can it be proven that the flips are real? You can prove their not, but you can't prove they are (unless there's an imbedded secret ID within the paper itself, or something like that). They could easily be copies of real ones that had been cracked. He could be selling multiple batches of the same flips, to scam the sleazy. Maybe that's his devious plan.... :D B ) Similarly, I'm wondering if someone WAS interested, would he provide a few detailed scans of the actual flip numbers as (quasi) verification? :confused: C ) Could we get some of the shill bidders to contact him and then retract their offers to buy? ;) |
This is the same guy with the 73 Schmidt cello in the 75 cello wrapper.
Click on the Craig's list photo and it takes you to his photobucket. three clicks to the right and Bingo ---- the Schmidt cellos appear. A hobbyist or a professional?:eek: |
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cursing in raritan nj is illegal. they can always find a way to slant it against you...and if they can't win it they sure can make your life a nightmare. they can charge you...bring you to court and tie you up in lawyer and court fees for no reason. kevin |
Yeah I guess law enforcement is powerless to investigate something that looks like it might be the prelude to fraudulent or criminal activity.
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kinda like selling "tobacco pipes'
not illegal but certainly fishy |
Why would anyone buy this unless to commit a crime?
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I almost think these inserts were somehow taken out of PSA. Who breaks open 1500 holders?????????
Probably not the case but that is such a huge # if indeed these are all authentic. |
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I should add, I don't like seeing them being sold as I DO know it will likely lead to hobby issues down the road. |
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for every loser there is a winner |
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In the case of the person selling the flips, they are only looking for $1,000 of revenue. Which leads me to believe that they likely have not chosen to cast a cloud of suspicion over a seven figure operation to boost sales by one-tenth of one percent. Such a business model would be inanely stupid, in my opinion. Just my two cents. Best regards, Eric |
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there for the possibility, not to mention that cracking that many above average star slabs does raise suspicion on what the motivation might've been! finally i check what was visible and they're real not fakes see pics http://i1188.photobucket.com/albums/...ps2ae318c6.png http://i1188.photobucket.com/albums/...ps87f6d998.png |
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No, I do not believe this is a 50/50 proposition. Respectfully, I posit the following: Frauds tend to present like a pyramid...and, typically, the only person or people who make money are at the top, while everyone else gets screwed. In this particular instance, the person selling the flips is akin to Bernie Madoff. Everyone else involved (who makes money here) should be likened to early investors of that Ponzi scheme. Just my two cents, Eric |
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Not a million dollars worth for sure but I have busted out a couple hundred cards because I hate grading and think they are ugly in the holders.
I threw them all away Quote:
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Im serious, if someone wants to organize it, I will throw money in right now to buy this so someone can burn them. Dead serious.
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Do you think these are the same ones that our Net54 friend had pulled from ebay?
Rob M. |
i would think that psa can figure out who this is....
this person is probably not a random collector. who has this many cracked slabs of high dollar uber expensive top grade cards? kevin |
did this get pulled down?
kevin |
Why is it that the TPGs, that so many collectors freely give so much money too, don't care enough about the integrity of their work, and the peace of mind of their customers, to develop flips that become tamper evident when a holder is cracked open?
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For what its worth, the font on those flips looks off. Admittedly the photo is blurry, but I think the flips themselves are fakes.
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