Victory earned. And with a hard lesson.
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I've posted here the past couple weeks regarding my denied, appealed, denied, denied Paypal dispute regarding a scam that opened my eyes. I managed to get my refund today though, through a whole lotta HeII raising and through the executive office. Apparently the people working down below don't know their a##es from a hole in the ground. But then again. There's much bureaucracy to go around in corporations. And the Disputes category on this website has more posts than any other I believe that shows how well the company is being ran (into the ground).
I was actually a victim of a commonly occurring USPS tracking scam. Paypal had told me during the dispute that the seller provided a tracking number. I knew it was fake. But I didn't realize just how prevalent it is for scammers to provide fake tracking numbers to steal money. The tracking shows "something" was delivered in my town at a "front desk, mail room". It does not give any description regarding the package. I'm pretty sure there is no front desk in my home. And part of me wonders if some people at both USPS and Paypal are in on this rather large scam. How else can it get so big? I don't believe real honest people would allow this to spin out of control if they were actually trying to solve a problem. One can do a quick Google search and become highly educated real quick. But somehow, the people at Paypal have a learning disability. One thing is for sure. If I were a head investigator at Paypal, it would become difficult (or impossible) to use Paypal to scam people. Not because I am brilliant. But because I care enough to do something about fraud. Unlike Paypal. They talk about it. But I believe that's all they do. END.

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