|  | Posted by Bill Vermillion on 11/25/06 21:15 
In article <454f446b.3101671@news-server.houston.rr.com>,Citizen Bob <spam@uce.gov> wrote:
 >On Sat, 04 Nov 2006 18:47:43 GMT, glenzabr@nospam.xmission.com (GMAN)
 >wrote:
 >
 >>>[NB: Always check the packaging of any product at a retail store
 >>>because they may put the returned item back on the shelf. Get only
 >>>packages that have not been opened.]
 >
 >>Its illegal to sell an opened or returned item as new to unsuspecting
 >>customers, at least here in Utah.
 
 >I believe that's true for most states.
 
 >That's why there is "pallet electronics" which is where eBay sellers
 >get their junk.
 
 I used to keep my ears and eyes open and my mouth shut when I'd go
 browsing around in 'hi-fi' stores.
 
 In one I heard a saleman speaking to another about how he could
 re-package high-end [$100+] phono cartridges so no one could tell
 they had been opened.
 
 In another they would open the boxes of hi-fi gear - receivers and
 such - very carefully from the bottom.  They would then put these
 on the shelf as demo units.
 
 When someone bought a unit, they would repackage the demo [or
 perhaps a returned unit] and carefully seal the bottom, and then
 brag about the sealed factor packaging that was in place on top of
 the box.
 
 When our studio owner got a new system for his office, I saw the
 box and said "You got that from XXXX didn't you".  When he said I
 was correct and asked how I knew, I pointed out the bottom of the
 box that had been opened one time and carefully resealed with
 the big copper staples so often used then.
 
 And one time I bought a laser-disk at a store, and the clerk
 said "let me get one from the back room so I don't have to
 put another price label on a new one".
 
 When I got it home I noticed a very small slit in the cover
 where they had slit the original package, and then were renting the
 disks out, and then re-selling them as new.
 
 A few years later I ran across a person who worked there and told
 him why I never trusted any of the high-futility stores [as Don
 Davis calls them] because of things like this.
 
 He countered with something like "laser disks don't wear out so
 it's the same as a new disk".
 
 He just didn't have any problems renting a disk several times,and
 then selling it as new, and making gobs of profit per disk.
 
 While re-selling use as new is probably illegal in all states,
 there are a lot of people who seem to be doing it.
 
 Bill
 --
 Bill Vermillion - bv @ wjv . com
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