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'Hazzard' Car Buyer Fails to Pay

'Hazzard' Car Buyer Fails to Pay
By RACHEL KONRAD, Associated Press Writer
60 minutes ago

SAN FRANCISCO - A nearly $10 million eBay bid for a car made famous by "The Dukes of Hazzard" seems to have vanished faster than the Duke boys escaping from the sheriff.

The General Lee's owner _ actor John Schneider, who played the blond heartthrob Bo Duke in the 1980s television series _ is upset that the $9,900,500 winning bid appears to be a hoax. The bid set an eBay record last week.

Schneider plans to list his 1969 Dodge Charger with a bricks-and-mortar auction firm that strictly screens buyers, and may file a lawsuit against the bidder, said Allen Stockman, who runs the star's Agoura Hills estate and has sold scripts, memorabilia and other items on eBay for three years.

"If this guy was just doing it as a prank or to ruin someone else's chances, he deserves to be hit in the pocketbook," said Stockman, who gave the winning bidder a negative rating in eBay's feedback forum.

Schneider, 47, was at a promotion in Las Vegas and could not be reached for comment.

The winning bidder _ identified on his eBay home page as William Fisher, or "fishbashr1" _ did not return e-mails and did not answer the phone listed for his house in Laguna Hills.

Schneider's plight is the most recent fraudulent bidding episode at eBay.

In December, a Montreal man listed a 40-year-old acetate of "The Velvet Underground & Nico" by Andy Warhol. Bidding began at 99 cents, but after 10 days, 253 bids and numerous articles about the item in the media, the winning bid was $155,401. Within hours, the bid was determined to be a hoax and the item was relisted.

In March, bids on a gas grill said to be owned by Red Sox slugger Manny Ramirez reached $99,999,999, the highest bid the Web site was technically capable of listing. EBay pulled the listing after the company couldn't verify the grill was owned by Ramirez.

EBay spokeswoman Catherine England said the company doesn't keep track of how many winning bidders renege.

"There are all sorts of reasons a transaction may fall through, and we have a claims process for both buyer and seller," England said.

When bidding escalated on the General Lee, a customer service agent called Stockman and recommended that he only accept pre-qualified bidders who could prove that they had secured financing. But Stockman said he didn't have the time for credit or background checks.

LINK
 
Originally posted by: Brutuskend
'Hazzard' Car Buyer Fails to Pay
By RACHEL KONRAD, Associated Press Writer
60 minutes ago

SAN FRANCISCO - A nearly $10 million eBay bid for a car made famous by "The Dukes of Hazzard" seems to have vanished faster than the Duke boys escaping from the sheriff.

The General Lee's owner _ actor John Schneider, who played the blond heartthrob Bo Duke in the 1980s television series _ is upset that the $9,900,500 winning bid appears to be a hoax. The bid set an eBay record last week.

Schneider plans to list his 1969 Dodge Charger with a bricks-and-mortar auction firm that strictly screens buyers, and may file a lawsuit against the bidder, said Allen Stockman, who runs the star's Agoura Hills estate and has sold scripts, memorabilia and other items on eBay for three years.

"If this guy was just doing it as a prank or to ruin someone else's chances, he deserves to be hit in the pocketbook," said Stockman, who gave the winning bidder a negative rating in eBay's feedback forum.

Schneider, 47, was at a promotion in Las Vegas and could not be reached for comment.

The winning bidder _ identified on his eBay home page as William Fisher, or "fishbashr1" _ did not return e-mails and did not answer the phone listed for his house in Laguna Hills.

Schneider's plight is the most recent fraudulent bidding episode at eBay.

In December, a Montreal man listed a 40-year-old acetate of "The Velvet Underground & Nico" by Andy Warhol. Bidding began at 99 cents, but after 10 days, 253 bids and numerous articles about the item in the media, the winning bid was $155,401. Within hours, the bid was determined to be a hoax and the item was relisted.

In March, bids on a gas grill said to be owned by Red Sox slugger Manny Ramirez reached $99,999,999, the highest bid the Web site was technically capable of listing. EBay pulled the listing after the company couldn't verify the grill was owned by Ramirez.

EBay spokeswoman Catherine England said the company doesn't keep track of how many winning bidders renege.

"There are all sorts of reasons a transaction may fall through, and we have a claims process for both buyer and seller," England said.

When bidding escalated on the General Lee, a customer service agent called Stockman and recommended that he only accept pre-qualified bidders who could prove that they had secured financing. But Stockman said he didn't have the time for credit or background checks.

LINK

BIG lol there. Hopefully more people will realize that place, as well as Paypal, is becoming a gigantic scam.
 
Well, was Schneider really naive enough to believe that confederate flagged redneck mobile was worth 10m? :roll:

Sure, it's a collector car, but the people who collect such cars keep their money buried in their back yard, and nowhere near 10m. :shocked:
 
Come on....it'd a Dodge. It's depreciated so much by now that John should be paying ME to take it off his hands and to the crusher. I don't care how much it looks like the orange clunkers they drove off ramps in the 1980s.
 
Well it's getting more publicity now because of the BS. He may get more this time around than what he originally would've gotten, if the bidders are legit in the next listing.
I'm keeping an eye on his current Listings to see if it comes up again. I want it to hit at least 1million.
 
lol I predicted this would happen. Ebay blows. They got some nice publicity here, but I doubt the car will sell for more than a million in a genuine auction.
 
I think I said in the original thread that bidding is one thing, but paying is another.

ANY Ebay auction which does not screen and pre-approve bidders and has a lot of off-Ebay buzz will end up this way. People read a story somewhere, check the auction, think the funniest thing in the world would be to place a huge bid, then do it. What's the penalty? Nothing.

This car will never sell for $1 million or anything close to it, regardless of how much publicity it gets.
 
Originally posted by: Vic
lol I predicted this would happen. Ebay blows. They got some nice publicity here, but I doubt the car will sell for more than a million in a genuine auction.

Of course no one expected the high bidders to pay. But it's annoying when kids think it's funny to bid absurd amounts of money and ruin other people's auctions.

IIRC, this auction only allowed bidding by approved bidders, so I guess the seller is partly at fault for not screening his bidders.
 
Originally posted by: mugs
Originally posted by: Vic
lol I predicted this would happen. Ebay blows. They got some nice publicity here, but I doubt the car will sell for more than a million in a genuine auction.

Of course no one expected the high bidders to pay. But it's annoying when kids think it's funny to bid absurd amounts of money and ruin other people's auctions.

IIRC, this auction only allowed bidding by approved bidders, so I guess the seller is partly at fault for not screening his bidders.

Well yeah. Ebay is fine for household items and the like, but high-end items don't belong there. It's not like there aren't hundreds of auction houses that screen for reputable buyers.
 
hehe, one of the morning radio shows here in town interviewed John Schneider the a few days ago about this. The jockeys were asking him if they thought the winning bidder was really going to pay. Schneider was saying they were already having trouble contacting the bidder but he was hopeful since the winning bidder had been competitively bidding on the item earlier in the auction (the winning bid was a pretty big jump from the second highest). He was saying if his lawyer couldn't get the bidder on the phone then the lawyer was going to head out to Laguna Hills to try to find the guy. Schneider was selling to car to help fund a sequel to an independent film he had teamed up with someone on and really believed in. The original film had limited release but seemed to have good response from the public. Can't remember which radio show though or the name of the movie.
 
10 million? Are there really that many dukes fans that rabid? I don't think the star trek auction fetched that much for one of the enterprise models...and those people are hardcore.
 
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