bscrive
New member
2012 RT
Now, it is going for $11200.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/2012-Can-Am-/141562578663?&_trksid=p2056016.l4276
Now, it is going for $11200.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/2012-Can-Am-/141562578663?&_trksid=p2056016.l4276
Item location: Czech, Czech Republic
Might be a stolen Ebay id? 2 sales in the last 6 months and rest are over a year old and all sales are for clothing... yea stinks of SCAM!
JT
Ask the seller where they are, and where the bike is...
You want to come see it in person before making an offer.
And... you have cash in hand!
See what happens. :shocked:
I have wondered about that myself. Obviously many eBay scammers are just as inept as the phishing email people, or the tax due scam phone callers. Sadly, some people fall for them. I hate to think how many millions of dollars I've left on the table by not responding to an agent of the Nigerian Ministry of Finance, or the lawyer of an African widow whose husband left a few million in a US bank, or the like. Got my first IRS tax scam phone call today. I just can't wait for the local cops to come pick me up! He called me by my everyday first name, not my legal name, always said IRS, not Internal Revenue Service, and said I have 24 hours to call back or the local cops will come pick me up! How stupid do they think most people are? :banghead: Even if some people think IRS folks are a**holes they do at least follow a protocol, and will give you time to work things out. Plus they have their own enforcement officers or use the FBI or Federal Marshals, but not local 'cops'!Here's what I don't get-- why don't the eBay scammers at least *try* to make them appear like they're not a scam?
If I wanted to scam somebody out of a Spyder, I'd start by not lowballing the price, or even better, put it on a bid with a low reserve.
I know a sucker is born every minute, but the route to a good scam is minimizing the number of logical leaps your sucker has to make before they put the money down. When you're dealing with a customer already looking to spend $10K++ on a major purchase, even the dumbest marks are going to do at least a modicum of due diligence.