profocus
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posted on December 15, 2000 09:28:48 AM new
I received a email with instructions to submit an affidavit regarding ps2cart fraud. The affidavit says that you agree that you will testify and cooperate fully with the investigation and potential prosecution of any and all perpetrators. Then you have to send a copy of your driver's license, copy of a household utility bill, have your signature notorized... and mail it to PayPal.
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tutam
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posted on December 15, 2000 09:32:50 AM new
When did you recieve it?
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profocus
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posted on December 15, 2000 09:40:05 AM new
2 days ago... would you like me to forward it to you... also I just called by Credit Card company and they are immediately reversing my payment made to X.Com PayPal on 10/28...
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mogu
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posted on December 15, 2000 10:17:57 AM new
I haven't received it yet....How's Paypal deciding who to send it to? Why aren't all of us receiving it? I wonder...
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pornstar400
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posted on December 15, 2000 10:40:07 AM new
I received this also. You have to write to PayPal and file a claim. They will then send you the info.
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profocus
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posted on December 15, 2000 10:42:49 AM new
My Affadavit Information was emailed to me...
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tutam
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posted on December 15, 2000 10:43:55 AM new
I did contact Paypal and they still havnt sent it to me.
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lobes22
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posted on December 15, 2000 10:59:53 AM new
Hey, i just got a call from Pay Pal, and the money from Game Tek was credited to my account today. I filled out the fraud report online, then sent back an email with all of the information. My account has been credited today, so I say good job Pay Pal and thanks for holding up the TOS.
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mogu
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posted on December 15, 2000 11:51:09 AM new
I also filed it, too, but haven't received anything back from them.
Can you help me on this paypaldamon?
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paypaldamon
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posted on December 15, 2000 01:43:09 PM new
Hi,
I can't speed up the recovery process for users because they are working on it as fast as they can.
As I did state, nobody is going to lose any money and your patience is much appreciated. They are working on all cases as quickly as possible.
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TMMamoru
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posted on December 15, 2000 09:01:32 PM new
What exactly does it mean to get one's signature notorized?
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retired2late
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posted on December 15, 2000 09:29:35 PM new
A Notary is a person licensed by the State to witness signatures. They watch you sign the form, then they sign it also and put a seal or stamp of some kind on the form attesting to the fact that they witnessed you actually signing the form.
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TMMamoru
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posted on December 16, 2000 12:09:29 AM new
Umn. Okay. So I have to drive to town to the courthouse to pay someone to watch me sign a peice of paper? (Of course I gotta pay, right? Nothing is free anymore...)
Any other Proof of Life? Maybe a polaroid?
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Zazzie
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posted on December 16, 2000 01:18:06 AM new
Notaries don't work at Court Houses they are not civil servants
---check your Yellow Pages--you might be surprised to find one in your neighbourhood--not all Notary Publics have offices or storefronts--some of them do it from their home.
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booksbooksbooks
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posted on December 16, 2000 01:44:15 AM new
Most banks have notary services available for free if you're a customer.
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Zazzie
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posted on December 16, 2000 01:55:46 AM new
oh yeah---I forgot you could find them there too---it is ususally one of the staff who has the training and title.
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avaloncourt
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posted on December 16, 2000 03:00:15 AM new
Just a note... If you belong to AAA, you can have anything notarized by them at no charge.
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sg52
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posted on December 16, 2000 11:19:00 AM new
A demand for a notarized affidavit before you get your money back is insulting. It is designed to reduce the number of refunds which PayPal has to issue.
Ask yourself: do I need this hassle?
If the answer is no, dispute the charge on your credit card. Show PayPal who's in charge here.
How can you demand your own customers grovel at your boot bottom like that, Paypaldamon. Drop the "legal" crap, this is repugnant, and utterly unnecessary for any legal or law enforcement reason.
sg52
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TMMamoru
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posted on December 16, 2000 02:18:49 PM new
I kinda got to agree with sg52 on that one. There asking for just way to damn much stuff. It has to be just so they have a dozen more ways to deny claims. Hell, I had one of my intitial Fraud Checklist E-mail rejected by PayPal because they said I was "Missing information."
All the questions were answered... I don't know what I missed, but I sent it in a second time, and now haven't heard anything in weeks.
I can see PayPal looking for ways to deny payments.
"You statement wasn't notorized / notorized unacceptably..."
"Unacceptable proof of address / not a utility bill..."
"Drivers Licence unreadable / missing information neccisary for investigation / cannot be accepted due to lack of SS number... etc..."
There's a hundred and one ways that this can cause delays or rejections in the returns on the customers behalf. Finding a notary may be hard in some of the smaller towns. For rentals and apartment dwellers, you may not have a utility bill, or they may not be in your name! Even more basic... what if you don't have a license?
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KateArtist
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posted on December 17, 2000 08:44:00 AM new
Sounds like some people didn't have to go through all that providing of info. How did the person who made out the fraud report online manage to get out of it?
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