What do forum members think of American Memorabilia's practice of solicting items for their auctions by contacting sellers about the items that are in the sellers' live eBay auctions? In the past, I was contacted many times by AMI regarding items in my ongoing eBay auctions. Here is a recent example of what I'm talking about (note: Tony AMI is Tony Giese from American Memorabilia):
I'm trying to picture Keith Vari (from Lelands), Brian Marren (from Mastro), or Robert Lifson (from Robert Edward Auctions) engaging in this practice ... somehow I'm having difficulty imagining this. Call me nuts, but I don't think this is exactly what eBay had in mind when they set up the "Contact Member" mail system. Though I admit that it is nice to be reminded of the class and ethics by which AMI operates.
As always, I welcome the commentary of war hero James A. Rast or any of AMI's other fraudulent representatives to provide comment.
Reid
P.S. Being that this is a very high end Clemens jersey (one of the finest I've seen), I can't help but wonder how often this kind of solicitation has led to high end auctions being ended early. I guess there is only one entity that knows for sure.
I'm trying to picture Keith Vari (from Lelands), Brian Marren (from Mastro), or Robert Lifson (from Robert Edward Auctions) engaging in this practice ... somehow I'm having difficulty imagining this. Call me nuts, but I don't think this is exactly what eBay had in mind when they set up the "Contact Member" mail system. Though I admit that it is nice to be reminded of the class and ethics by which AMI operates.
As always, I welcome the commentary of war hero James A. Rast or any of AMI's other fraudulent representatives to provide comment.
Reid
P.S. Being that this is a very high end Clemens jersey (one of the finest I've seen), I can't help but wonder how often this kind of solicitation has led to high end auctions being ended early. I guess there is only one entity that knows for sure.
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