Well, How about thinking this through? If you were to sell something like a car, and it was a sizeable amount, you can set up a new account at the bank, to receive the money { New money never meets your old money} for the wire transfers. Talk to your banker, I'm sure they know ways to handle this kind of deal. If you stand there with your hand out, counting hundreds, how many are counterfeit? Unless you use one of those special pens, you may get stuck. I'm sure there is some way to be ripped off, any way you do business. Just use the same common sense that you would, if the deal was the other way around. Just don't pass up a good deal, because the Nigerian's scam people sometimes. On Fri, 12 Mar 2004 16:42:44 EST HootowlKY@xxxxxxx writes: > > hiya , > best rule is , never , never send money nowhere to nobody . they > want your > car let em come , pay ya and then over with . > thats my carved in stone process, larry > > -- > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > ---- > Please address private mail -- mail of interest to only one person > -- directly to that person. I.e., send parts/car transactions and > negotiations as well as other personal messages only to the intended > recipient, not to the Clubhouse public address. This practice will > protect your privacy, reduce the total volume of mail and fine tune > the content signal to Mopar topic. Thanks! > > '62 to '65 Mopar Clubhouse Discussion Guidelines: > http://www.1962to1965mopar.ornocar.org/mletiq.html. > > > > ---- Please address private mail -- mail of interest to only one person -- directly to that person. I.e., send parts/car transactions and negotiations as well as other personal messages only to the intended recipient, not to the Clubhouse public address. This practice will protect your privacy, reduce the total volume of mail and fine tune the content signal to Mopar topic. Thanks! '62 to '65 Mopar Clubhouse Discussion Guidelines: http://www.1962to1965mopar.ornocar.org/mletiq.html. b7yoMz.