- Joined
- Jan 17, 2018
- Messages
- 733
- Reaction score
- 574
Back in October I responded to an ad on this site and worked out a straight across trade deal. His 1861 Navy for my 1862 Pocket Police. He sent his gun USPS priority, paid the fee for insurance and I did the same. My gun got to him without issue. The gun he sent me got all the way here, got scanned out for delivery and disappeared. I had to wait 15 days to file a lost item claim, then I waited 60 days for a response and they told me I had to have an FFL to ship a firearm and they wanted to see my receipt. I replied with quotes from their own regulation telling them it was a black powder muzzle loader and sent them page cuts from three different companies showing what the gun was worth. Here's what they sent me today. Denied - now they say it's a C&R relic and I have to have a license for that and my ads weren't good enough, I have to show that I paid someone, something for it. What is wrong with these people. Even when you show them their own regulation they ignore it and come up with something else. I have a vintage WWII watch that is worth about $1k and was just in the process of packing it up to send it to a jeweler for cleaning and adjustment, what if it gets lost, how can I prove it's worth when it's something my father had in his pocket coming back from war? You can't call anyone, everything done on by mail or online. I have one more appeal but this was a straight across trade and even if I can convince them to actually read the regulations on muzzle loaders I've nothing to show that I paid for it. Their feigned (or deliberate) ignorance pisses me off. Wonder if I can file a small claims case against my local postmaster - it got scanned out of his building, put in the mail carriers vehicle and somehow between there and my house went missing. I'm out $300.