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#1
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Posted By: leon
The following is SGC's official response to the unfortunate events the past few days. If anyone has any questions, please feel fee to post them here or contact me directly at sskeffington@sgccard.com We thank you for your patience and understanding concerning this matter. |
#2
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Posted By: Matt
I'd be pretty upset with the reporter (and in this circumstance, I use that term very loosely) if I was SGC. |
#3
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Posted By: Steve
The reporter is protected under the constitution, I would be more inclined to be mad at the person that fed her that information. Reporters usually do not make stuff up. They are told things and report them. |
#4
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Posted By: leon
I agree it's a non issue at this point. I disagree it's not the reporters fault. That's a bunch of BS in my book. She should be absolutely responsible for what she says in an article. She is probably protected somehow but that doesn't excuse her gross misinterpretations/misrepresentations in my book.....take care |
#5
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
The reporter IS the one to blame here. Simply going to SGC's website she could see they are not a "Restoration" company. The onus is on her to get it right, not to just take what anyone says to her as fact. Besides it would make absolutely no sense for the owner of one grading company to have another grading company "Restore" his card. Like SGC would want a competitor having knowledge that they "Restored" a card??? And I'm not saying that they do that, because I don't believe they do, I'm saying it's implausible. |
#6
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Posted By: JK
Reporters, like everyone else, have agendas. I have personal knowledge of many occasions in which a reporter ignored facts or only reported those facts that made for a better story. |
#7
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Posted By: Fred C
Reporters are supposed to report facts. Before reporting the facts they are supposed to VERIFY that they are indeed representative facts. |
#8
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Posted By: Jeff Lichtman
Of course the reporter can be held responsible. The constitution does not protect a reporter from libeling an individual or company. That being said, I think this is much ado about nothing and is now a non-issue. GAI, differnet story. When they open up on Monday I'll call and ask why one of their owners didn't trust his card with GAI. |
#9
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Posted By: Mark Evans
I have no dog in this fight, very few graded cards, just an impartial observer. But, I'm confused why everyone is beating up on this reporter. Perhaps not the greatest job of reporting, but the key allegation, that SGC agreed to "restore" the card, apparently comes from Haas's pleadings in the lawsuit. The reporter claims to have attempted to contact Forman, presumably for his reaction, but that her call was not returned before the story was published. Mark |
#10
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Posted By: PC
Glad SGC had a reasonable response here, but the reporter definitely 18-1'd the facts in that article. Would be interested to read the actual complaint, but the issue appears dead at this point (unless the third party that is "inspecting" the card has an issue). |
#11
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Posted By: D.C. Markel
Mystery Surrounds 1952 Topps Mantle Case |
#12
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Posted By: Tom Russo
I know Ms. Wright from several years of practicing law in Morris County. She is the courthouse beat reporter for the Daily Record. Most newsworthy happenings at the county court involve criminal cases. She has become very good at reporting on details of criminal trials. I have found her to be very fair in that she always reaches out to defense attorneys for comments while many reporters for the larger papers seem to act as publicity arms of the prosecutor's office reporting only convictions. Interesting civil cases are encountered far less frequently and obviously Peggy is no expert on baseball cards. She likely reported based on the content of the pleadings, what she heard in Court and comments from Mr. Haas. Obviously, she should have gotten a response from SGC. Sloppy... possibly, but not malicious. I doubt that SGC's reputation has been damaged in the slightest. Most people don't know or care about what they do. Those in the hobby know SGC and GAI and their relative reputations. Haas's actions are very strange and I can't blame Mr. Forman for exercising caution when it looked like he was possibly being set up. |
#13
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
IMO the only one damaged in this case here is GAI. SGC found two imperfections on a card that GAI deemed 'MINT 10 PERFECT!!!! BEST IN THE WORLD!!!!!!!1' |
#14
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Posted By: davidcycleback
I think, unfamiliar with the hobby, the reporter mixed up her terms. Yes, I think the error was sloppy and hasty, but innocent. |
#15
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Posted By: barrysloate
Dan is correct. If SGC found two imperfections on the card, no matter how inconsequential, how on earth did GAI give it a 10? Ten is an almost impossible grade for a 56 year old card, unless it jumps out at you and hits you in the head. |
#16
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Posted By: Matt
Barry - not sure there was risk if it came back lower since he owns GAI; wouldn't he just have them re-slab it a 10, knowing it was in a 10 before? |
#17
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Posted By: Brian
I would much much rather have a SGC 9 than a GAI 10. Mr. Haas should be jumping for joy his Mantle is now in a SGC 9. |
#18
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Posted By: barrysloate
Matt- that's yet another problem. He owns GAI and he gets GAI to grade his cards? Sounds like a huge conflict of interest to me. |
#19
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Posted By: Marty Ogelvie
It seems to me that the card is MORE valuable in an SGC 96 holder than a GAI 10 holder especially a few years down the road... |
#20
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Posted By: leon
I don't think this card has been put into an SGC 96 (9) holder currently, unless I missed something. I have been told it probably is an SGC 96 still, though....best regards |
#21
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Posted By: Marty Ogelvie
Well shucks, if its not holdered yet, then send it to PSA and get a 8.5 |
#22
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Posted By: JimB
A partial owner of GAI did not think their grade of 10 was good enough?!?!?!?!?! |
#23
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Posted By: Ricky Y
Interesting...this kind of stuff reminds of those excercises given at numerous communication seminars I've attended...one person at the end of the row is given a story..and tells it to the next person...and then to the next..the last person then gets up and rights the story as he/she was told on the black board and then explains it to everyone in the room...ofcourse its often nothing like what the original story entailed..looks like in this case, the first person was also the last person in the row. |
#24
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Posted By: Tom Boblitt
If you had this card, REGARDLESS of how much you trusted Dave Forman and the boys over at SGC, why wouldn't you use the walk through service..........? |
#25
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Posted By: Bottom of the Ninth
I would love for any one of you to have people watching every move you make each day at work and criticizing, jumping to conclusions and then posting on a public chat board. |
#26
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Posted By: Jim VB
Greg, |
#27
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Posted By: Bottom of the Ninth
Hi Jim, |
#28
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Posted By: Jim VB
Very true. When facts are not yet in evidence, this board, and most public forums (and I guess, some newspaper reporters) tend to fill in the blanks with their own thoughts. |
#29
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Posted By: barrysloate
I certainly wasn't drawing any conclusions. If anything, I am still not sure I understand exactly what happened here. |
#30
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Posted By: Cobby33
This is what happens when one acts only out of greed. |
#31
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Posted By: Frank Evanov
This is what happens when one acts only out of greed. |
#32
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Posted By: Jeff Lichtman
If Forman was corrupt and looking to make money off the deal, wouldn't he have just slabbed the card into a 10 holder? It's not like it had too far to go to get to that level. |
#33
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Posted By: Richard Masson
"This is what happens when one acts only out of greed." |
#34
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Posted By: Neal Kane
<<Matt- that's yet another problem. He owns GAI and he gets GAI to grade his cards? Sounds like a huge conflict of interest to me.>> |
#35
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Posted By: Anthony N.
<<because a card that was in fact "flawless" would have to grade higher still.>> |
#36
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Posted By: Paul
The one thing missing from this story is why SGC demanded a release before sending the card back to its owner. Even when the owner is dissatisfied with the grade, standard procedure is to send the card back to the owner. After all, it is his card. From SGC's statement, it looks like the owner must have been alleging that SGC damaged the card. But even so, I doubt that gave SGC the right to hold a card hostage while demanding a release. It's his property, and if he has some crazy theory that SGC damaged it, he can try to prove it in court. The fact that he sent it back to SGC for a second look should not give SGC the right to hold his card hostage until he gives up his legal claims. |
#37
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Posted By: Cobby33
Richard- |
#38
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
Anthony, why don't you just make 10 better, and make 10 be the top number and make that be a little better? |
#39
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Posted By: davidcycleback
When transferring an item, any item, this expensive to and from owner, it may be standard procedure in any business to have transfer and review papers. Remember that this is an item valued at over $200,000, not a table and chairs set from IKEA. Companies receiving and transferring a $250,000 computer chip, diamond or condominium may require similar review and transfer documentation. Signed for priority mail is probably not the way a $250,000 ring is transferred to the owner, nor the way the owner would want it returned. |
#40
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Posted By: barrysloate
Of all the great lines in "Spinal Tap", that one seems to be the most memorable. |
#41
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Posted By: Corey R. Shanus
When high-grade high-profile cards are being submitted for crossover, is it standard procedure for the grading company to ask the other grading company (or in the alternative the card owner) to remove the card from the holder? And is it standard procedure if the card cannot be crossed over at at least the same grade to request a release from the card owner before returning the card? While as has been pointed out it makes good business sense to request such a release, and in fact such a practice is typical in other businesses, is this the norm in the card grading industry? Or is it that the facts and circumstances of this particular instance led SGC to believe it faced unusual risk and accordingly felt it prudent to take steps to protect itself? |
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