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Ebay Seller Hyf24 Derek Jeter Autographed Photo Ugly Forgery COA Stacks Of Plaques

Check out the below ugly Derek Jeter forgery found on Ebay.

The below poorly-executed and laughable Derek Jeter forgery on a photograph is listed by Ebay seller Hyf24.

The worthless COA is from Stacks Of Plaques.

Although I've seen that particular style Derek Jeter forgery dozens of times, it continues to amaze me that people still list and sell garbage like this.

Ebay seller Hyf24 writes "I purchased this from a charity auction in NYC in 2004 for $525.00.

Did Ebay seller Hyf24 really pay $525.00 for this piece-of-crap Derek Jeter forgery, or is Ebay seller Hyf24 simply hyping their Derek Jeter "autograph?"

If Ebay seller Hyf24 paid $525.00, why in the world would anyone pay $525.00 for this before asking someone with autograph knowledge?

It's obvious that Ebay seller Hyf24 has zero knowledge of autographs.

But every Ebay auction reads "Seller Assumes All Responsibility For This Listing."

Even the Ebay suckers and wannabe autograph collectors won't bid on this Derek Jeter forgery with a starting bid of $269.99.

But then again, maybe they will.

All of this as Ebay continues to profit from the sales of forgeries.

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Derek-Jeter-New-York-Yankees-Signed-16-034-...

Tags: 16X20, CEO, Derek, Donahoe, Jeter, John, ebay, forgery, hyf24, photo, More…seller, signed

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this is laughable. not only the "quality" of the signature, but the idea that anyone would have paid that much, even for an authentic Jeter, back in 2004.  

Should get your head examined if they paid $525.00 for that piece-of-crap Jeter forgery.

Pathetic forgery

There is no way anyone paid $525.00 for that crap. He's just pimping it

You pose a lot of questions--what are the answers? What did the seller say when you told them that the item wasn't authentic?

http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Just_asking_questions

Have you ever actually been to a benefit with a charity auction--silent or otherwise?

You don't buy the items being auctioned off any more than you buy tote bags for $50 from PBS. You're making a donation, and receiving whatever the item is in exchange.

I've bid on autographs at benefits for family friends going through hard times without researching the authenticity, and they always go for far higher than market value, because that's not the point.

Gift cards usually start at face value and end up going for at least double or triple.

When my friend's dad was dying of cancer & the family had a benefit to help make sure that the wife and kids were well taken care of when he passed, we bought a $10 gift card to the local grocery store in the silent auction for $50--and then gave the gift card to the family as a gift, so they could use it in their time of need.

Heck, if a member of my family needed a benefit to raise money for medical care or something, I could auction off a rotten banana and get money for it, because people wouldn't be buying the banana--they'd be making donations in exchange for it. Wanting the item or caring about it is far from a prerequisite to bidding on it in those situations.

And, yet, here you all are, somehow magically able to insist that these things aren't possible & would never happen.

I have no idea if the autograph is authentic, but I do know that you all need to tone the vitriol.

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