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The website they bought the pup through seemed real enough, and the seller even sent videos of the dog napping and playing with her littermates. Wanting to cuddle her through the screen didn’t bring her into reality, though. They first sent $655 as a deposit and shipping fee. Then a company claiming to be a delivery service contacted the family and demanded $980.76 in life insurance for the dog. Life insurance? There are risks to transporting flat-nosed canines in hot weather, but the dog was coming from Pennsylvania. That’s when a strange response came from the website that he bought the puppy from, which had since disappeared. When CBS Sacramento got involved, the breeder reacted poorly, later issuing a refund.
Do you know what’s sick and ridiculous? Demanding more and more money from someone whose daughter has already fallen in love with an imaginary puppy. Call Kurtis: My $1,600 Purebred Puppy Never Showed Up [CBS Sacramento] |
- by Laura Northrup
- via Consumerist
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