You are missing my point. The problem is a systematic Fraud of bidding. A bidder that comes in and bids well over 200K in a single event, should be verified that they have the ability to purchase. Bidder #77562986 had his bidding turned off during the auction until he could prove to GL that he had the funds to purchase...which he did and ended up with the truck. If this oversight was done for a guy purchasing 14K, what was done for the guy pushing 200K?
This is not a default on a single auction. This is a bidder that pushed prices up on 20+ auctions and defaulted on all of them. I would like to know what protocols are in place to stop this type of thing?
Surplus prices are quite often set based upon past historical bidding. If I see that I did not get XXX lots when I bid 8K and they were sold for 10K, next time I am more likely to bid 10K if I want said lots. That works up until it is found out that the "Sales" at 10K were all frauds........
Not sure if this will help on smaller deals, and only applies to single sales, but seems like a great start ! Just copied this a few minutes ago !
Dear Valued Customer,
This is a friendly reminder that the Government Liquidation Terms and Conditions have recently changed. Effective Friday, July 1, 2011, credit cards will not be accepted for any single charge in excess of $10,000. Payment will be required in the form of certified funds, i.e. wire transfer, cashier’s check, or money order for charges in excess of $10,000.
Please click here to view the changes to Section 6: C & G- #2 of the Terms and Conditions.