OneBiteAtATime wrote:The consignor is a friend of mine. I didn't know it while I was bidding. Afterwards, we were talking and I told him I was concerned whether they were real because they were so nice. He told me "I bought this set in 1981."
I was surprised, didn't know it was his. His statement quelled my fears until I got home and weighed them....
Now I have a possible problem with both my friend, and the auction house, but I'm stuck with them.
I'll sell some of the horde to cover the loss. What can you do?
ScottyTX wrote:Humm, Looks like really good fakes to me but not 100% sure. On the 1886 is it missing a point on the star at the 10 o'clock position? They appear to be slightly lacking in star details but I'm not 100% sure if it's wear of from the die as I'm no expert...
NHsorter wrote:Stupid question probably, but just to cover all the bases. Did you run a magnet over them yet?
Remind that auction guy that he could be in deep doo doo for selling counterfeit US currency.
Thogey wrote:OneBiteAtATime wrote:The consignor is a friend of mine. I didn't know it while I was bidding. Afterwards, we were talking and I told him I was concerned whether they were real because they were so nice. He told me "I bought this set in 1981."
I was surprised, didn't know it was his. His statement quelled my fears until I got home and weighed them....
Now I have a possible problem with both my friend, and the auction house, but I'm stuck with them.
I'll sell some of the horde to cover the loss. What can you do?
You take them back to the auction house and pound them up their a$$, that's what you do.
Don't be a laydown!. Noone can sell you counterfeits.
You are on high ground with a dbt and fake coins. You're going to let them screw you out of $800?
I'd bite his nose off!
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