Not only are retailers on e-bay looking for fake merchandise, they're there looking for stuff their employees stole and are now selling.
I worked at a bike shop (Performance, if you know who they are) back a couple of years ago, and corporate caught a girl reselling stuff on e-bay. They couldn't prove that she stole it, so they fired her for buying stuff under employee discount and selling it, which was a violation of company policy.
We all knew that most of it was stolen.
Is e-bay actually anti-gun, as a matter of corporate policy, or are they just covering their butts with the CA DOJ?
In other words, are their gun-stuff rules a result of political or a business/legal decision?
Anybody know for sure?
--Shannon
I worked at a bike shop (Performance, if you know who they are) back a couple of years ago, and corporate caught a girl reselling stuff on e-bay. They couldn't prove that she stole it, so they fired her for buying stuff under employee discount and selling it, which was a violation of company policy.
We all knew that most of it was stolen.
Is e-bay actually anti-gun, as a matter of corporate policy, or are they just covering their butts with the CA DOJ?
In other words, are their gun-stuff rules a result of political or a business/legal decision?
Anybody know for sure?
--Shannon