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#1
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Posted By: jay behrens
I just got this email and thought it might be of interest to others. The Cliff Notes version is that PayPal got sued for improper freezing of accounts, etc and instead of going to court a settlement has been reached where PayPal gets to claim they did nothing wrong but get to fork over $9m plus for doing nothing wrong. |
#2
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Posted By: ramram
might I say: "The attorney's just got rich again". (Sorry Hal, et al.) |
#3
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Posted By: Dan
$265 last year. I sent the item that was sold, the buyer did not wish to take insurance on the item, 5 months later the buyer filed a complaint and said that he never received the item. Yes, 5 months, well, Paypal gave him the money out of my paypal account. I fought it with them for several months but they refused to budge. |
#4
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Posted By: Ben
I had a buyer claim non-receipt on me for a $600+ item just this month. I sent the card priority express with tracking, the most reliable method by far in Canada, and successful delivery was in fact confirmed on the tracking website on July 8th. The claim was filed on the 7th. I know the card got there, I've been sending cards express w/tracking for years with never even the slightest problem. In fact, I sent out 4 other cards THAT DAY, all arriving on the same day as the one that was "not received" and all those buyers were happy. |
#5
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Posted By: jay behrens
I think the lone exception to having to have DC on a package is if you send it overseas. I recently sent a pakage to England. The buyer claimed he never got it. Fortunately, I sent the thing Global Priority, so it had a tracking number. When I sent PayPal a copy of the receipt with the tracking number, that put an end to the guy's claim. |
#6
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Posted By: petecld
I hate to go against the grain here but Paypal worked in my favor. I never got an item and thanks to Paypal, I got my money back. |
#7
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Posted By: Tim Newcomb
As a buyer I love paypal for the convenience and speed. |
#8
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Posted By: Julie
Just because of the constant charges. |
#9
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Posted By: warshawlaw
Meanwhile, those of us who've been screwed by Paypal and simply decided to eat the costs may now have a shot at getting our money back and a chance to use Paypal again under circumstances that are more equitable. But that's not important to you, right? All that counts for guys like you is that the lawyers should not be paid, right? I am so sick of hearing this BS. |
#10
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Posted By: Reid Bruce
As an insurance defense attorney turned trial lawyer (and yes, a dreaded Mississippi trial lawyer at that), it pains me to always be on the defensive when it comes to attorney's fees. Would you criticize a business person for running a successful business or a stock broker for successfully investing money? Plaintiffs attorneys and class action attorneys are no different. They put up their own money and place it in an extremely risky situation TO HELP PEOPLE AND ACT AS A REGULATING FORCE. Yes, we make money...and we are the only profession who gets blasted for it constantly. Attorneys don't make that money automatically. Any trial lawyer worth his salt puts in 12 hour days, 6 days a week and lives through the incredible stress of having your client's livelihood hanging in the balance. Also, without effective regulation by the states or the federal government, it often falls upon trial lawyers to ensure that corporations don't commit fraud without consequences or pollute the environment without penalty. That is the purpose of punative damages, to deter future wrongful conduct. The bottom line is this, hate us all you want and continue to scream tort reform and class action reform. Just don't complain when your daughter or son is killed on an operating table and the worst thing you can do to the doctor afterwords is take his insurance company for $250,000.00 or less (about 1/3 of what the doctor makes in a year). You tell me if its worth it. |
#11
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Posted By: ramram
Attorneys do protect all of us but just the same, most are not doing it because they feel a moral obligation to help the down-trodden. Like most businesses, it's the profit and the risk versus reward that drives their work. Just like any business, they take advantage of the laws and try to make a profit. Unfortunately, if it's a business drawing that profit nobody typically notices. If it's an attorney lawfully making a profit it can sometimes appear distasteful. None-the-less, that's why reform is necessary when it gets too disagreeable. |
#12
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Posted By: Josh
Very well stated |
#13
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Posted By: Reid Bruce
Ramram, point well taken. I will be the first person to agree that there are unscrupulous plaintiffs lawyers out there that lie, cheat and steal. Unfortunately, every profession suffers from bad apples. I would urge people to realize that you can't throw the good out with the bad, though. If you punish all plaintiffs for the actions of a few plaintiff's lawyers, the vast majority of people who lose out are people who have done nothing wrong to begin with...the clients. As to bad lawsuits, there are some, and my opinion is that a lawyer who pursues this path repeatedly should face severe sanctions and lose his license. One quick note about medical malpractice insurance and I'll shut up and get back to baseball. Insurance companies exist to abate risk and pay out judgments. That is their only function. The problem that we are facing is not higher judgments (which is a myth), but insurance companies who made extremely bad investments in land and stocks during the middle to late 1990's. When profit margins started to decrease, stock prices did as well. Hence the rate increases...across the board (even my legal malpractice insurance shot up at a rate equal to medical malpractice insurance and lawyers weren't getting sued any more than they usually do). As California's tort reform tought us, insurance reform must occur simultaneously with tort reform if malpractice rates are to decrease. If I were a doctor who had never been sued, I'd be angry at my insurance company for raising my rates, not the trial lawyers who sue the bad doctors out there. At any rate, the bottom line is that there should be fewer lawyers and the lawyers we have should be competent and well regulated. I just hate to see those persons who are truly injured have their compensation cut because of a few greedy idiots. |
#14
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Posted By: Kenny Cole
Spare me the sob story about doctors leaving. That's right up there with "the check's in the mail." A couple of years ago, the government perfomed a study on that issue, looking at 5 of the alleged "medical malpractice crisis" states, in each of which the doctors made that same claim. The result of the study was that the claims were "wildly exaggerated" and that the study was "unable to confirm" that it was occurring in ANY of those states. |
#15
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Posted By: ramram
Kenny - I can agree with some of your points but I also question many of your conclusions as well as what study you're reporting about. My philosophy is that when it looks, smells and quacks like a duck, then it's a duck. I live on the border of Kansas and Missouri and we've seen the exodus. I don't even think we're one of the states on the "critical list". Tell me this...if you make a litigation mistake, what is the cost? You just might lose the case if the other attorney didn't make more mistakes. You're rarely held more accountable than that unless it is an extreme situation (has anybody heard how hard it is to disbar an attorney? Sometimes murder won't even trigger disbarment). A doctor, however, is understandably held to higher standard but most expect them to be mistake-free (especially an emotional family as well as an emotional jury). Unfortunately, it isn't possible. They're not perfect but, God forbid, if they make that mistake then there is a plaintiff attorney waiting at their door. I can guarantee you're not exposed to that degree of microscopic oversight. Mix an understandably imperfect profession, deep pockets, emotions and an attorney and what do you get? More zeros than we can count. There has to be controls because we all end up paying that doctor's bill in the end. |
#16
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Posted By: Anonymous
"The problem that we are facing is not higher judgments (which is a myth), but insurance companies who made extremely bad investments in land and stocks during the middle to late 1990's. When profit margins started to decrease, stock prices did as well. Hence the rate increases...across the board." |
#17
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Posted By: ramram
Hey! Did anybody see that Paypal got nailed in a class action lawsuit? |
#18
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Posted By: Kenny Cole
Ramram, |
#19
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Posted By: ramram
Kenny, you know if you went to an AMA meeting we'd all be yelling, "Oh my God, they killed Kenny!". (Yeah...Southpark...Sorry, couldn't help it) |
#20
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Posted By: Kenny Cole
Ramram, |
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