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bobtheman

US
Registration date: Jul 16, 2009
0 helpful votes

bobtheman’s comments

Nov 13, 2009
8:35 pm EST
A quick Google search would have directed you to this site where tons of people report this as a scam. Do your homework!
If you turned in the vehicle before the end of your lease, there is a penalty.

If they are going to say you owe them money, tell them you want an itemized breakdown of the charges. Otherwise, call a lawyer. If you never signed a lease contract, I'm not sure how you even had a truck, let alone be held liable for the charges.
This was a scam. You gave your personal information to thieves.
Nov 14, 2009
7:23 am EST
The ad probably said "At participating locations". The location you called probably wasn't participating.
Nov 14, 2009
7:26 am EST
Then use the road that doesn't cost money and leave your house earlier. Maybe move to Ohio if you want to pay less fees.

You're not "forced" to drive on it. You want the convenience of the faster drive time, but then whine about paying the fees. You don't HAVE to pay the fees at all. Just don't use it.
Nov 14, 2009
7:28 am EST
It says right on the packaging don't use while sleeping.
Nov 14, 2009
7:55 am EST
Maybe use a real pharmacy next time.
Nov 14, 2009
10:27 am EST
No. Primerica is a b.s. company. Some people will not succeed, that's true. The issue is every time I turned around they had another requirement that the recruiter forgot to tell me about. Most of the time it was costing me more money.
On top of that, their life insurance is WAY overpriced. I got the same policy from Allstate for 50% less. The loans they sell had very high interest rates. The investments are crap, and the guy who sold me mine had no idea what he was talking about. He pushed a fund he didn't know a thing about. At this point that account sits there, with less in it than when it was purchased 10 years ago.
Primerica suckers people with no financial experience (hence why they're typically drowning in debt) and makes them think they can be financial experts. Even worse, they then turn these people out onto unsuspecting clients who trust these people to know what the hell they're talking about. They don't!
I'd suggest getting a better caliber of boyfriend instead of the loser you have who is in jail. Then you won't have to deal with this company.
Nov 14, 2009
12:31 pm EST
I think it's just amazing that all these people never thought once of researching whom they were buying from. One Google search and you'd find all these complaints.
Nov 14, 2009
12:33 pm EST
Raymond summed up what I was going to say. Same things with death certificates.
Nov 14, 2009
12:38 pm EST
OK. Google had nothing to do with it. You were scammed.

Second, these days, EVERYONE has a sob story. You messed up. Take responsibility for not researching whom you were trusting your credit card number with.

Third, maybe you can, you know, get the baby's father involved to raising his own kid. This is why you shouldn't do the monkey business until you're married. For future reference, of course...
Just a shot in the dark, did you think of calling the Bill Me Later folks? I know they have a Web site.
You may want to contact your cell provider, not post on some random Internet site that has nothing to do with your cell service.
Nov 14, 2009
12:43 pm EST
1.) Why on Earth would you trust a Mexican pharmacy? They could send you poison filled pills and you'd never know.
2.) Why not fill your prescription properly? Are you an addict looking to get extra pills?
Nov 14, 2009
12:49 pm EST
All over cilantro? Why would you put cilantro on pizza? How about sausage? Sausage is good!
Or you could always take care of your own kid. That works too. I know it worked for my family.
Technically, it wasn't unauthorized. If you read the small print, you'd see that's what you agreed to.

Lesson learned: Research BEFORE you give just anyone your credit card number.
Nov 14, 2009
9:27 pm EST
Grants 360 complaints are a dime a dozen. The small print on that site says they'll screw you repeatedly, but most people just don't read it. Here is what you didn't read on that site:

Offer Details: Clicking the buy button will activate your trial membership with Grants 360 and provide instructions to the supplied email address! To activate your trial membership to Grants 360 your card will be charged $1.95 and then you can immediately take advantage of the exciting savings Grants 360 has to offer! After your 1 day trial period it's just $57.61 for each 30 days for Grants 360. Remember, you can chat with a live operator by calling 1.866.955.1669 within the 1 day period to cancel or emailing us at support@grants360.com and providing detailed information to enable us to process your request, and you will not be charged. As an exclusive bonus we are offering our customers 2 days of unlimited access to our work from home guide for a charge of $1.95. Cancel anytime during the trial period to avoid any further charges. Otherwise, a one-time fee of $38.21 will be charged to your credit card. Marking the checkbox and submitting the form constitutes an agrement to these terms on your part.

The concept of giving your credit card to someone you know nothing about (not you specifically, but people who do this) boggles my mind. I triple check a site before I trust it with my credit card.
Downgrade? That's a new one.
Nov 14, 2009
9:36 pm EST
Here we go again. What IS IT with people not able to type Web site properly? The Web site does exist. I was just there. Amazing!
Maybe your son can stop sucking on the teet and learn to take care of himself. He made the error. There are consequences for not understanding how a debit card works.
Nov 18, 2009
7:42 pm EST
Does the interview talk about how he touched little boys?