That thread people were concerned about

Posted by: wfaulk

That thread people were concerned about - 28/08/2005 07:25

I've moved it (not deleted it at all) somewhere that only a few of us can see it. People who are in the know, let us know when it's safe to move it back.

Tom, it'd be nice if there was some way to set a thread as viewable only to logged-in users. Is that possible? Or maybe a members-only section?
Posted by: CrackersMcCheese

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 28/08/2005 10:13

Good stuff. I did wonder where it had gone!
Posted by: pgrzelak

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 28/08/2005 13:31

Did I blink and miss something? Or perhaps I read the thread but just do not realize it is gone.
Posted by: mlord

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 28/08/2005 13:34

Bitt's reference is to the thread with the story of Derek's recent UK visit.
Posted by: pgrzelak

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 28/08/2005 13:36

Ah. Okay.
Posted by: Derek

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 28/08/2005 16:52

Thanks Bit.

Everyones help is much appreciated! I'll let you all know what's happening when suitable.

Cheers
Derek
Posted by: CrackersMcCheese

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 28/08/2005 16:59

Looking forward to the updates
Posted by: loren

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 29/08/2005 06:05

Ditto... I can't wait to hear how this turns out. Hopefully with ... ummm... someone in a pokey situation (excuse attempted UK pun).
Posted by: oliver

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 29/08/2005 06:27

With a thread like this going, I really wish I saw the original thread.

Anyways, the main purpose of this post is to say...

Happy Birthday Bitt
Posted by: wfaulk

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 29/08/2005 12:17

Thanks. Go me! This is the last time I'll be a power of two for quite some time.
Posted by: tonyc

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 29/08/2005 16:36

Quote:
Thanks. Go me! This is the last time I'll be a power of two for quite some time.

Best wishes on filling up as much of your 7-bit counter as possible.
Posted by: mlord

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 29/08/2005 16:41

I think Bitt is still very much in the realm of 6-bit counters at present.

Happy you-were-born day!
Posted by: schofiel

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 01/09/2005 07:42

Things are apparently happening... more news as it happens.
Posted by: wfaulk

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 01/09/2005 10:49

I hope that's good news.
Posted by: sein

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 01/09/2005 11:03

I hope so too.

I am quite concerned that there is more of the same thing happening by the same people. Also worth noting that some things are gone and others will be gone soon.
Posted by: Dignan

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 02/09/2005 01:48

Good luck, Derek. I had no idea what you folks were talking about, as I only skim the General forum, but I was able to find it. I really hope this gets sorted out...
Posted by: Daria

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 02/09/2005 04:38

Wait. That means you're my age.
Posted by: schofiel

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 03/09/2005 16:09

Something was happening on Thursday, no news of results as yet.
Posted by: canuckInOR

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 07/09/2005 02:06

This thread reminds me of the Seinfeld episode where they all talk about doing that thing without ever metioning it by name. You know the one? Where George gets caught in the bathroom by his mother with a Cosmo (I think it was)?
Posted by: jmwking

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 07/09/2005 11:41

Was that the master of my domain? It was the only episode I ever saw: I was visiting an office the week it was going off the air a few years ago. They found out that I'd never seen it, decided I should, and picked the episode. It was definately a fun lunch.

-jk
Posted by: Robotic

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 07/09/2005 21:50

If only it were this easy...
Posted by: canuckInOR

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 07/09/2005 23:10

That's the one. And it was "Glamour", not "Cosmo".
Posted by: CrackersMcCheese

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 13/09/2005 16:03

Any updates on this?
Posted by: schofiel

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 14/09/2005 10:42

Due to:
- slowness on the part of eBay
- slowness on the part of the blue clad people

Nothing has happened. The situation remains the same: but by now, all the stuff has gone. Derek is pushing them hard: the main problem seems to be the fact that the UK has

ONE

yes, you read it right, ONE blue clad person to liase with eBay.
Posted by: CrackersMcCheese

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 14/09/2005 13:37

This sucks. We handed it to the Police on a plate!
Posted by: shadow45

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 14/09/2005 16:19

it doesn't get any easier than that!
practically did their job for them.
Posted by: sein

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 14/09/2005 19:42

There was this one time when I was naive, 18, and borrowed 700 quid from my dad to get a new laptop on eBay. Sent the guy the cheque, laptop nowhere to be seen. Its a very sore story.

Anyway, I did some detective work of my own. I handed the police a document which detailed the transaction, a photocopy of the cheque from the bank, every piece of communication by email and phone, phone numbers, address of his house, his girlfriends house, where he worked. What more exactly do you want? They took a statement and said they would look into it. Everytime I called, there was a new excuse.

Do I have my money back? No.

We're talking a good 3-4 years ago. This bigtime stressed me out when I was at uni, and this made a lot of my work at the time very crap (yeah, not to mention the fact I didn't have a computer).

By this time, the guy has changed his phone, been fired from his job (Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, Oxford), left his girl (Cromwell Close, Chelmsford, Essex), moved into a new place (Church Hill Road, Oxford), and then left there without paying any bills. Apparantly, he (maybe?) now lives in Charlton Park, Wantage, Oxford but I am not sure. Its getting a little hard to pick up the trail.

Not only does he have my money, he also has money from another eBayer who I now talk to occasionally on MSN Messenger. I have reason to believe there are others.

I am still going to hunt him down like a dog. Anyway, this is long and rambling but the morel of the story is...

Dealing with the Police is supposed to be the correct way. But they are very often a complete waste of time.

(edit) By the way; if any of you guys ever come across a Gary (aka Garrie) Scholz who may have lived/worked in Oxford and Essex, particularly Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in 2002 I would love to hear from you.
Posted by: AndrewT

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 14/09/2005 20:54

At work we run an eBay store selling PC's and peripherals. One day we got a call from a very confused and distraut lady who had received a VAT receipt through the post for a laptop she had no knowledge of even purchasing! Clearly this lady had had her credit card details, including the card address and CVV number stolen and somebody was using her details to purchase high value items on eBay.

We checked the purchase records and discovered that the laptop was due for delivery that day but it had not yet been delivered. We called the carrier and instructed them to hold on to the laptop and under no circumstances deliver it until further instructions from us.

We contacted the Police, explained the situation and offered to put them in touch with the carrier so they could be ready to pounce once the goods were signed for at the East London delivery address. We were giving it to them on a plate basically! Were they interested? Nope. They suggested we advise the lady to contact her credit card company and that was it, they could not have been less interested.
Posted by: FireFox31

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 14/09/2005 23:23

And if you take matters into your own hands, the police will be on you in a second.

I can just imagine your swift trial:
Judge: "You are charged with the severe beating of and theft of [$800 / laptop] from [Oxford fraud / East London thief]. What do you say in your defense???"
You: "I brought him to justice."
Judge: "Leave that to THE POLICE! You're being fined, and jailed, and sued for damages and theft by this poor assaulted citizen and..." etc etc etc.

Remember, that's your tax payer dollar at work. Do you agree with how it's being used?

Honestly, though, the police are probably constrained by standard operating procedures, red tape, and bureaucracy when trying to pursue a criminal. Warrants, court orders, probable cause, "criminal's rights", burden of proof, evidence, etc.

On the flip side, I wonder if the police could be sued for professional negligence (especially regarding this thread). They simply didn't do their job (it sounds like). But, the police are so connected, they could never be held accountable. Again, your tax dollars (pounds, euros, whatever) at work. It's time for change.
Posted by: wfaulk

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 15/09/2005 12:37

I think, more to the point, recovering an $800 laptop doesn't generate as much revenue as handing out traffic tickets.
Posted by: FireFox31

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 15/09/2005 22:47

Good point. Hopefully tracking down mercenary, justice-hungry crime victims is similarly unprofitable.

<edit>
So, what if there was a paid-per-case mercenary justice league, able to be hired by victims to track down the perps? It would be better than paying tax dollars to have police generate revenue. Well, better until it turned into an unsubstantiated witch hunt of bounty hunters killing based on rumor, untruth, and suspicion. Ah, justice is just too complex.
</edit>
Posted by: Ezekiel

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 16/09/2005 01:08

FF31-
It's called civil suit aka suing someone. There's no jail time but you make them pay, regardless of whether they win or lose (have to pay the lawyers!). There's also small claims court, which can be effective.

Oh, and by the way, the name of the thing you're trying to put your finger on: The Mob.

-Zeke
Posted by: sein

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 16/09/2005 04:46

Quote:
So, what if there was a paid-per-case mercenary justice league, able to be hired by victims to track down the perps?

If you have a problem, if no-one else can help and if you can find them, maybe you can hire the A-Team.

(cue music)
Posted by: schofiel

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 16/09/2005 07:04

Hmmm.... that's not a bad idea (thinks)
Posted by: wfaulk

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 16/09/2005 12:31

Quote:
the A-Team

Somehow, I don't think a jury-rigged cabbage gun is going to be helpful in this situation.
Posted by: Derek

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 18/09/2005 17:11

Quote:
... the main problem seems to be the fact that the UK has

ONE

yes, you read it right, ONE blue clad person to liase with eBay.


Actually that isn't quite right. eBay only have ONE person liasing with the boys in blue. Evidently it's a very friendly helpful person, but eBay says that enquiries can take up to 14 days to be processed!!!! How can that be in this day of computer automation?? Does eBay give their users 14 days to get rid of any hot goods before the cops come round knocking???

Sorry, I've only become slightly cynical over the last few weeks ...

Cheers
Derek
Posted by: hybrid8

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 18/09/2005 17:48

Actually, if you sue someone and they DON'T lose, it means YOU lose. You've spent just as much (or more) on legal fees, time effort, etc. And depending on the circumstances you may also be liable to pay for their legal fees. Only lawyers win in court. If I was being faced with a civil suit I thought was unfounded I'd immediately counter-sue.

Small claims can be useful to keep costs down and in fact even better if settled before it goes to court. Just being served is often enough to get the debtor to come to their senses and pay.

Bruno
Posted by: Ezekiel

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 19/09/2005 12:34

Well, that's one way of looking at it. Another way is that you'll enjoy spending your money making the other party suffer the court hassle. It's not a good monetary argument, but it is a useful tool of vengeance. Money's only one way of keeping score.

-Zeke
Posted by: canuckInOR

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 21/09/2005 19:17

Yes, but then *you* have to suffer the court hassle, too.
Posted by: Ezekiel

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 22/09/2005 11:06

Yes, but if you're vengeful enough to do it, making them suffer may be fun.

-Zeke
Posted by: jondle

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 27/09/2005 16:40

Another problem is when something rare (no longer manufactured) gets stolen. In that case, sueing and getting monetary compensation wouldn't make me happy at all. Great now I have some money, but how am I going to replace something that isn't made anymore. If I didn't get the item back in the process, I wouldn't be even content until I was paid at least twice what the item retailed for when it was new, plus some extra for time setting up/installing/loading/hanging/painting/whatever the case may be.

In other words, my deepest sympathies. To me it would be like my cousin was kidnapped.
Posted by: CrackersMcCheese

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 09/04/2006 13:25

Was there a happy ending with this??
Posted by: schofiel

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 10/04/2006 08:26

The car was recovered; most of the bits on eBay were recovered: the blokie was arrested with some parts still up for sale.

The sad part: car was utterly trashed - it had been rolled, and was taken to a yard for police inspection. It was then left open to the elements for several weeks, so that it went mouldy and rusty. It's scrap.

Derek has been busy testing exciting new cars recently, but it hasn't stopped him replacing the car with something special - come to the Owner's meet in September, and you will be Dazzled (literally)
Posted by: sein

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 10/04/2006 10:32

Quote:
come to the Owner's meet in September

Maan, all this suspense. People with great cars, secret location, meeting some Empeg people... I just want to fast-forward a few months!
Posted by: schofiel

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 10/04/2006 13:31

Ha! He's hooked, guys!

Be there or be square...
Posted by: altman

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 11/04/2006 07:01

I can believe it'll be one of those very orange focuses then

Hugo
Posted by: schofiel

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 11/04/2006 07:18

Posted by: wfaulk

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 11/04/2006 12:34

Well, in that case, I guess I can "undelete" the thread.
Posted by: FireFox31

Re: That thread people were concerned about - 15/04/2006 22:22

Pardon if it's crass to ask, but did Derek get his rightful compensation to purchase said new Dazzler? After all that, I hope they sold the perp's kidney to pay Derek back.