He would have showed up with a bank draft or cashiers check.   Your bank would have examined it, and cashed it.   The amount of the check may even have been for more than the agreed price.   He'd drive off with your car and the extra cash (gas money?) .  About a week or 10 days later the bank would call you & say by the way "that check was no good, you owe us $$$$"    Its happened.

On 3/30/06, John Nasta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Wouldn't a LS6 car have functional cowl induction?

A friend was just telling me about a week ago that Yahoo auctions attract
lots of scammers and non-payers for some reason.

Someone emailed me recently saying that he wanted to buy my "1967" El Camino
and that he needed to buy it right away and wanted to know if he could fly
in and drive it home. Any time somebody says he wants to drive it home, it's
a scam. Not to mention that mine is a 1969 and it is not for sale. I didn't
even bother responding.







--
Rick Schaefer
72 TPI El Camino

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