[78-L] e-bay question ^

Mark Bardenwerper citrogsa at charter.net
Wed Mar 28 00:26:44 PDT 2012


On 3/27/2012 8:14 AM, Kristjan Saag wrote:
> Knowing that many of you have long experience with e-bay, I ask for advice.
> I recently discovered that personal items who had belonged to my late
> aunt, were for sale on e-bay. Identity cards, letters, photos, school
> documents etc. They were labelled "militaria", since most of the
> documents were from the war years.
> I happen to know that these things must have been stolen from her
> apartment, which I and my sister emptied after her death. Before this
> there was a long period when social service personnel, cleaners and
> others had access to the apartment; the theft must have occurred during
> this period.
> The seller claims he has bought the items on a second hand market. He is
> a trusted seller on e-bay and runs a professional business, both on-line
> and has his own store. There is no reason not to believe his story.
> But he is not willing to part from the items in favour of my sister who
> is my late aunts' legal heir - unless my sister  pays him the equivalent
> of 150 dollars for his expenses, that is: the sum he paid when he bought
> the stuff.
> The problem is: we didn't know of these items before I found them on
> e-bay the other day. But knowing my aunt, there is no way she would have
> sold her dearest documents (family photos, school-time documents,
> correspondence) herself.
> What am I to do next? Report the theft (eight years after my aunt's
> death...)? Or report to e-bay, although the seller has withdrawn the
> items from the list? Any other ideas?
> Kristjan
>
>
>
You should contact your police. What a shock this must be!

-- 
Mark L. Bardenwerper, Sr.

Technology...thoughtfully, responsibly.

Visit me at http://citroen.cappyfabrics.com



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