Trueler has received a report from DealFind customer who has managed to verify The Butcher’s claims of organic meat. It happened that farms could not confirm that they supplied The Butchers in the last 2-3 years. Nobody can tell where The Butchers gets tons of meat daily.
The Butchers shop has been featured by Webpiggy, Dealgetters, DealFind, Dealticker, TeamSave, BuyTopia daily deals websites (did I miss anyone?). There were a lot of complaints on service, products and prices at The Butchers after the major offer on DealFind. It turns to be a scam at some discussion forums. Trueler shows that meat from the Butchers contain starch and carrageenan.
Most likely deal55.com is a scam and is not legit. There is a big concern that this “daily deals” website featuring brand name gift cards is not legitimate and just collecting e-mail addresses, credit card numbers, and other personal information which is called phishing. Customers, beware! Use it at your own risk! It may even charge your credit cards and disappear after with no gift cards provided. There is no information about this business at all.
Do not purchase pet insurance! It is not a lottery, it is a scam. You will get much better coverage and pleasant customer service if you will be putting the same premium each month into your saving account.
Here is a serious complaint on Best Russian TV services received by one of the customers. It includes false advertisement and promo actions, money grab, and terrible customer service. Nothing could be resolved with BestRussianTV Support Team.
If you order some goods from US into Canada and deliver with UPS, FedEx, or other courier, you may pay applicable taxes at any local CBSA office without going to the port of entry. You just need to get shipment’s invoice from UPS and present it to Canada customs in order to self clear.
Groupon featured a new deal in Toronto: “$30 for $60 Worth of Children’s Toys, Gear, Clothing, and More from Peek-A-Boo”. Beware of Peek-A-Boo overcharges! They grab up to 8% of extra taxes for children’s clothing and footwear, bunting blankets, books, etc.
The offer makes you think that it should be inexpensive deal: “affordable price”, “a few calls a week or a few calls a month”, “plans starting at only $15 a month”. In reality it shows $30 a month plus $200 at the time of purchase…
Trueler received several complaints associated with the selling technique used by Extreme Fitness, and made some further investigation. Keep in mind that the price of one hour personal training session at Extreme Fitness is about $115 ($100 + tax), and you will be legally required to pay for all the sessions you used exactly at this rate, no matter when you cancel.