My advice to you is to ask for photos of the cap on a recent and dated newspaper (first ask him where he is from if you don't already know)
If you are provided with images of the item atop a local newspaper that coincides with where they are said to live it may help prove they actually have physical possession of the item and aren't stealing photos of authentic items over the Internet to try and sell. Better safe than sorry but a week wait is a while and hopefully he's not just passing images of other people's items and trying to scam you into sending a payment for an item he does not own.
William Kramer
Well, thanks for the advise William. You're right. But I'm sure he owns the cap as I requested to take these pictures from it under these angles.
These pictures aren't provided on the website where he's selling the cap.
Could he have asked somebody else for the same photos?
Wauw Wagriff, you're digging deep! Why the suspicion?
?
That would be William Kramer/all1knew...
William
"Much that once was, is lost. For none now live who remember it."
Wow, I'm very sorry. Why did I do that? Sorry mate...!
William
"Much that once was, is lost. For none now live who remember it."
It's the beer Wagriff, it's the beer... on exercise in the Ardennes!!! ;-)
I don't have any real suspicion I am just telling you how to protect yourself. Personally, hearing back a week later is somewhat of a red-flag but I play better safe than sorry (I've read about the nightmares created by con-artists in this hobby)
William Kramer
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