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Pennsylvania
Related: About this forumFed up with ticket scams? So are some Pa. lawmakers who want to get tougher on reseller
Philly Inquirer link: https://www.inquirer.com/business/fake-ticket-resellers-stubhub-seatgeek-20230924.html
Frances Dwyer sent $150 to the person on Facebook who claimed to be reselling two tickets to the Luke Combs concert in July. Dwyer told the person, whose Facebook profile included photos with children dressed in Eagles gear, that she would send the other half once the Ticketmaster transfer was completed.
The tickets never came. Instead, Dwyer, a 21-year-old Temple University student, quickly found herself blocked by the Facebook user and unsure about how to get her money back....
Some Pennsylvania lawmakers are hoping that fewer consumers experience the disappointment, and often shame, that comes with getting scammed by resellers of tickets to concerts, sports games, and other events.
State Rep. Robert Matzie (D., Beaver) introduced a bill earlier this month that would add speculative ticketing, or selling tickets that are not in your possession, to a list of offenses that can result in penalties under the Commonwealths Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law. The Pennsylvania Attorney Generals Office is responsible for enforcing that law. Breaking it can result in fines and other penalties, such as temporary and permanent injunctions.
The tickets never came. Instead, Dwyer, a 21-year-old Temple University student, quickly found herself blocked by the Facebook user and unsure about how to get her money back....
Some Pennsylvania lawmakers are hoping that fewer consumers experience the disappointment, and often shame, that comes with getting scammed by resellers of tickets to concerts, sports games, and other events.
State Rep. Robert Matzie (D., Beaver) introduced a bill earlier this month that would add speculative ticketing, or selling tickets that are not in your possession, to a list of offenses that can result in penalties under the Commonwealths Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law. The Pennsylvania Attorney Generals Office is responsible for enforcing that law. Breaking it can result in fines and other penalties, such as temporary and permanent injunctions.
- more at link -
Ticket-buying tips from the Philly Inquirer:
I would add to these: NEVER buy anything on Facebook.
But that's just me.
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Fed up with ticket scams? So are some Pa. lawmakers who want to get tougher on reseller (Original Post)
FakeNoose
Sep 2023
OP
LiberalFighter
(53,465 posts)1. Penalties should be higher.
FakeNoose
(35,659 posts)2. Yes, but right now there's no penalty at all
Then they need to make it harder to rip people off by selling tickets that you don't actually own.
MichMan
(13,160 posts)3. Ticket reselling above face value was prohibited in virtually every state for decades
Most all of them ended up making it legal