I've both accepted and sent Western Union money orders more than  
once. Why are they a source of fraud?
Paul
On Sep 19, 2006, at 9:28 PM, Adam Maas wrote:

> Shel Belinkoff wrote:
>> I listed an item on eBay and it sold.  Because of a situation here I
>> specifically requested payment by USPS money order.  The guy was  
>> late in
>> sending payment, which was ok, but then he sent payment using a  
>> Western
>> Union money order, which, because of circumstances here, I cannot  
>> take
>> right now.  He says "there's no difference" between a WU money  
>> order and a
>> USPS money order, and is claiming that I'm trying to defraud him  
>> in some
>> way.  I suggested that I return his MO when I get it and that if  
>> he wants
>> to send me a USPS money order, I'd be fine with that.  Otherwise  
>> we can
>> just cancel the transaction and he can take his MO back to where  
>> he bought
>> it and get his money back.
>>
>> He's also saying that he'll file a fraud report with eBay ...  
>> since there's
>> no transaction there can be no fraud, right?  I suppose he can post a
>> negative feedback, but I did specifically request a specific type of
>> payment, which I see as no different than requestin PayPal or a bank
>> transfer, with other payments being unacceptable.
>>
>> Anyway, what say the eBay gurus here?
>>
>>
>> Shel
>>
>>
>
> Western Union money orders are a common source of fraud. And they are
> NOT equivalent to a USPS Money Order, the latter can be cashed at any
> post office. As long as you specified USPS Money Order, you are  
> clearly
> in the right.
>
> -Adam
>
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