Jamaica Gleaner

WARNING! Scores of Jamaicans getting burnt shopping online

Scores of Jamaicans getting burnt shopping online

- Cecelia Campbell-Livingston Sunday Gleaner Writer ■ Nadine Wilson-Harris contribute­d to this story.

IT IS fast becoming a convenient way of shopping for many, but scores of Jamaicans are now finding out that going online to purchase items comes with its own challenges and dangers.

It the latest case, scores of persons have found that an online store they sent their money to has blocked them from its website without delivering the items they had ordered.

Jennyfer Marzouca is still waiting for the $18,600 worth of goods she purchased from the online clothing and shoe store KandiiKlos­et more than six months ago. After complainin­g about her ordeal, she was blocked from its website.

“I have not received my stuff as yet, and I [am] still blocked from them,” Marzouca told The Sunday Gleaner.

KandiiKlos­et was advertised as a mobile retail store, which promised to sell gorgeous children and women clothes. But Marzouca said it has not lived up to its promise.

“I feel used. When I started to contact them to order the stuff, it was ‘hun hun’. Then I did the transfer of money and from that time only excuses I have been getting,” said Marzouca, who is not the only one being given the run around by KandiiKlos­et.

One customer who paid for $10,000 worth of items on December 4 said she started to get concerned after not receiving her goods within the 10 to 14 days delivery period, as promised.

After making contact, she was blocked for some weeks, until she obtained a phone number for the proprietor.

“I messaged directly (and) they unblocked me from messenger when I told them my brother worked with MOCA (Major Organised Crime and Anti- Corruption Agency). They also made the promise that I would be refunded this month. I am still waiting,” said the woman.

For Michelle Cooper*, her ordeal started in June 2017 when she transferre­d money to the store’s account. She said after checking the many positive reviews, she felt confident to go through with the purchase.

“The seven to 10-day waiting period turned into months. I eventually got a part of my order along with an incorrect item in August. I was subjected to a lot of rude responses and in some cases, no response at all.

“I later discovered that the reviews were repeated screen shots that were placed on their page. After threatenin­g to go to the relevant authoritie­s I finally got a refund in January 2018,” said Cooper.

When The Sunday Gleaner contacted t he proprietor of KandiiKlos­et, she admitted that a number of clients are awaiting their orders but said she has responded to those who have made complaints.

“The major problem is that the delivery takes way too long and there ends up being poor communicat­ion, in that customers are provided with sufficient updates,” she said.

She insisted that some customers have had flawless experience­s while for some it’s horrible.

“While a person is free to air their displeasur­e, the biggest problem we have is that when the issue gets resolved by them either getting their order or a refund, the public is still of the view that we haven’t done so,” she said.

A notice was posted to the store’s Facebook page shortly after she spoke with our news team, inviting persons who had not received their orders to get in touch.

The online store has no address or telephone number on its Facebook page; however, buyers are prompted to send a message if they have any queries.

The store advertises that it sells items sourced from the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom and it takes seven to 10 business days for orders to arrive in Jamaica before they are delivered via a courier service.

But several persons showed our news team receipts dating back to August 2017 for items which are still not delivered.

“When we post on the page, she (proprietor) reports it to Facebook as spam and then message us about our complaint,” one said woman.

“I reported the matter to the Consumer Affairs Commission (CAC) via email, but we just got an acknowledg­ement of the email and that was it,” she said.

Director of communicat­ions at the CAC, Latoya Halstead, told The Sunday Gleaner that the commission’s database does not have a record of complaints about online rip-offs.

“It is important to note that anyone can set up an online shop. Therefore, before you place an order online, confirm that the shop has a physical address and a phone number where you can reach someone if you have problems with your order,” the CAC advised. *Name changed on request

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