Every year after Christmas, there is a peak of returns in the United States, and Americans will return goods they don't like and inappropriate Christmas gifts. Exchanging gifts at Christmas is a big event that adults and children in the United States look forward to, and how to choose a gift that satisfies friends and relatives is not a headache.
Many people simply attached the packaging bag of my return together with the shopping receipt when sending the gift, so that it was convenient for the counter staff to check, but he didn't look at it, and directly ordered to receive the goods, letting me go. I hurriedly reminded him that the bag was not sealed. The American principle of doing things is to trust you first, and the punishment for violations last. Once, I bought an Apple laptop online, and the text message showed that the goods had been received, but I didn't see anything at all, so I sent an email to ask, and the merchant sent another one without saying a word.
Isn't this trust of the Americans a bit excessive? There was a Thai student who bought a lot of brand-name bags in the United States** and stores, and then returned them with imitations, and then resold the real goods for a profit, and when he was caught, he had deceived more than 200 brand-name bag designs and many merchants in 12 states. Another guy named Thomas bought a computer from Wal-Mart, dismantled the parts and returned them, and then resold the parts for a profit of more than $1.5 million, and when he was caught, more than 1,000 stores had been defrauded.
As of 2017, a statistic shows that major companies in the United States have lost $351 billion in sales due to vicious fraud.
I'm Harry: Follow me for Don't Get Lost and stay up to date with the latest developments in the United States. February** Dynamic Incentive Program