Friday, July 13, 2012

Federal Judge Revokes Bail For Bullying Eyeglass Vendor



glassescat

Threatening to stalk, rape, mutilate, and kill your customers over a $150 chargeback is not a sustainable business model. We could have told you that, but it took a New York Times investigation, a Google algorithm change, and federal prosecution to stop the Brooklyn entrepreneur who built his eyewear business on the idea that online, there is no such thing as bad publicity. He allegedly sent out counterfeit designer eyewear, or no merchandise at all, then harassed and threatened customers who wanted their money back. When customers complained online, it boosted the profile of his brand. Now a federal judge has revoked the man's bail ahead of sentencing after listening to testimony from some of those customers.


We won't name the company here since the site is, remarkably, still operating. The business owner's lawyer argued there's no proof that he ever intended to actually harm any of the customers he harassed and threatened with bodily harm. But most people aren't used to receiving voice mails that say things like "I hope you die. I want to slice your legs off," as one customer recounted in federal court.


The judge in this case told the press that he may impose a harsher sentence than the three years given in federal sentencing guidelines.


NY judge revokes bail after hearing murder threats [AP]

Bully jailed for ’Net threats [NY Post]


PREVIOUSLY:

Harassing Customers As A Business Model




by Laura Northrup via The Consumerist

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