(** IF YOU HAVE BEEN SCAMMED BY CHAMPIONS MOVERS, PLEASE CONTACT ME AT TKN.MOVINGADVICE@GMAIL.COM **)
Most of my friends know that I had a move scheduled this weekend. Needless to say, it went atrociously. I cannot begin to explain how awful it was, but here are my detailed notes of the encounter. It’s long- VERY LONG- but it’s like a train wreck- once you start you won’t be able to stop. So please read it. And, if you have any legal insight, by all means, comment. I have pictures at the end, as well
Documentation of Move:
To preface, from the time this move began to go horribly awry, I took tedious notes, documenting times and events. Here are my notes.
I scheduled a move with CHAMPION MOVERS of FREMONT, CA roughly one month prior to my move. After getting roughly ten quotes from local movers, their offer sounded like the best mix of services and cost. I checked on a few review sites to look for any scathing reviews, and amazingly, didn’t come across any. At the time of sale I was promised a number of things by the sales representative, MICHAEL:
- Move in date of Saturday, Oct 13th
- Professional Moving Staff
- Free use of all moving materials, except for glass table top, which would cost extra to pack.
- A minimum quote of $207.00 for two movers (at $69/hour) for a minimum of three hours. I was given a rough estimate of between $400-500 dollars after move and extra packaging. The move was from a 1 bedroom apartment to a 2 bedroom apartment, 10-15 miles across town, from San Jose (CA) to Cupertino (CA).
- I told him a lot of my furniture was heavy and had lots of Marble; he assured me marble (and heavy) items would not incur any extra charges.
- Move would be completed same day (per their contracts agreement)
On October 12th, CHAMPION MOVERS called to give me my time window for the move the next day, Saturday. My window- keeping in mind I originally was promised noon- was now 2-6pm without any chance of something earlier. I scheduled the afternoon because I travel for business a lot, and would not have wanted to risk getting stranded somewhere due to bad weather, and missing a move the next day as a result in the morning.
The movers had not arrived by 5:30PM so I called the moving company (since they did not call me to give me an update) and got a dispatcher. I would find out later this dispatcher’s name was BEN GOLDMAN. Whether or not this is his real name, I doubt, but from here on the dispatcher will be referred to as BEN.
BEN informed me that the movers were running a bit late but would be there by 6:00PM, as they were just leaving for my residence now. No one showed or called at 6:40PM, so I called BEN back. I was told the drivers would arrive within moments. It was not until 7:20PM before I got a call. The movers were ready and needed my address, and were in Walnut Creek (CA) which is 45 minutes away. I gave them my address and called BEN back again to express my disappointment. I said that at this point, I felt a discount was justified. BEN continued to offer up excuses and apologies and ensured I would be getting “professional movers” and that he would contact the owner and would call me back within the hour. Seeing where this may be going, I took digital photographs of all of my furniture.
The drivers called at 8:10PM and said they were here. I guided them in so they could begin. It crossed my mind to cancel this ordeal entirely, however:
- My move-out date in the apartment was next Saturday, October 20th.
- I travel for work and would be gone Monday through Wednesday of next week.
- The movers said they wouldn’t be available that Sunday, the 14th, and probably not during that week, either.
- I had no way of knowing if another moving company could facilitate a move on such short notice.
My decision to move forward, in retrospect, was the wrong decision, but when you’re under the pressure of moving out and having a date where your lease ends at residence A, what other options do you have? We began the move, and the lead mover, NISSAN, walked me through the paperwork after he saw my stuff. Here is where the promises began to break down further:
- I was told that anything with marble or glass would require extra special packaging, and that this packing would cost extra.
- Since these were not the originally scheduled movers, this was a three man crew (not a two man crew) and that a two man crew would take us until 3AM and that I should pay $20.00/hour extra for the third man. Not having all that much choice in the matter, and for the sake of expediting this, I foolishly agreed.
- I would be charged- by cash or charge- in the middle of the move, before anything would be unloaded to my final destination.
I was discouraged, but I wanted to move, so I signed the document and we began. As the moving progressed I called BEN back to see if the owner had gotten back to him. He hadn’t. The move continued… 10PM… 11PM… 12AM. The movers (three of them, mind you) were not finished and ready to move until 1am! At that point, what choices do I have? Leave my possessions in a truck overnight with a company I already distrust? Or struggle through to get my possessions delivered?
The truck arrived at the final destination at 1:40AM. The first piece of furniture was brought up at 2:00AM. This apartment had no elevators- only stairs- and my new apartment was on the third floor, and my bedroom was on the second floor of our apartment. Obviously, the movers were aware of this and this is “included free of charge”.
Before we begin moving, as agreed at the start, it’s time to pay before they unload everything. Remembering that, per MICHAEL, my original written minimum quote was $207.00, and that the verbal quote maximum was “between four and five hundred dollars, realistically”. My new, official, price tag was here. My total for three movers during a nine hour move at $89/hour, plus the additional (roughly) $550 worth of packaging materials, my total was $1,359.00. Yes, even if you assume the highest number I was quoted, $500, a full $859.00 increase, and not to mention the bait-and-switch from two movers to three.
The pieces began moving into my apartment 1 by 1, at an average of 1-2 pieces every ten minutes. At 2:11AM they brought up my main bed frame. It’s heavy, has two marble pillars, and it’s tall. They got it up the stairs into the apartment, but when bringing it up the 2nd floor stairs in the apartment; they scuffed the top wall, both side walls, and then put large dents in the right wall, and in the hallway wall at the top. I took digital photographs of the damage done to my apartment immediately once the movers had gone back down to the truck.
At 3:00AM, Cupertino Police Officers knocked on my door. They explained that they had received a complaint from a gentleman who lives near the stairs, two floors below me. I explained my situation to them- as I have done so here thus far- and they sympathized with my predicament, and agreed I really hadn’t had much in the way of options. They went downstairs to talk to the gentleman and unfortunately he was adamant that the moving stop or citations be issued. The police asked the movers to bring up what was left, and then to return tomorrow at 9AM. I reiterated with the movers that they would be back tomorrow morning at 9AM to complete the job. They agreed each time. The moving ended that night at 3:41AM. I asked for details on how the truck would be stored and where. I was told the truck would be locked at 2295 RINGWOOD AVE in SAN JOSE (CA) and that the facility was indoors and had camera surveillance.
8:45AM comes and goes the next morning. I start by calling NISSAN, the lead mover from the night before, to ask him where he is and if he is close to arriving. He tells me he is at another job, and that another set of movers would be coming, but that the owner was on his way and should be there any minute. I called BEN and he said a different moving team would be coming sometime before 4PM, and that the owner was not on his way. No one could give me a solid time for when I would be getting my possessions back. BEN, again, said he would call me back. And didn’t.
I called BEN back about 9:20AM and asked for the owner’s name and phone number. His name is GIOVANI RUSO but BEN would not give me his number. He said he would ask the owner to call me back. Either this owner does not exist or he just does not care. He told me this time that the movers were now the same movers who would come back, but that they were tired after having worked late last night and that’s why they weren’t there yet. I explained that I had also stayed up until 4AM and that I was up at 8:30AM trying to resolve this issue, why couldn’t the movers be? I forget his excuse. I asked him if he cared at all about customer service. He said not enough to wake his movers.
At 10:00AM I contacted the Cupertino Police. I spoke with DEPUTY LEUCK (Badge Number xxxx) and explained to him my ordeal up to this point. I asked if I could file theft charges against the movers for not returning my possessions. He said unfortunately, since this was a contracted move, it was a civil, and not criminal, matter. Nonetheless, DEPUTY LEUCK seemed to feel that the situation was awful enough, such that he offered to call BEN on my behalf and speak with him.
At 10:30AM DEPUTY LEUCK returned my phone call and said that BEN had told me the movers would be here to finish the job between 2-4PM officially, without question. DEPUTY LEUCK said that Ben gave him mostly the same answers I had already expressed to him but unfortunately got nothing better than a time frame. I asked DEPUTY LEUCK for the case number, which is event# 07-287-xxxxx, and informed him I was planning on filing civil charges when this was concluded.
At 10:40AM BEN returned my call (the first time he had ever done so) and told me that the movers would for sure be there earlier than 2-4PM, but that DEPUTY LEUCK had requested an official time, so to play it safe he said 2-4PM, but that I should not worry. At this point, I was tired of BEN’s double talk, excuses, lies, and manipulation. I humored him and said I appreciated his help, and that I merely wanted my possessions back, and that just so he could tell the owner, I had every intention of filing civil charges once this matter was concluded, if for no other reason than to get something in motion!
His response was the best yet. He said that no matter what he was dedicated to giving me the best customer service in his power, and that since we had a contract, he didn’t care if I sued him or took him to court, and that he would still do everything he could to make me happy. My reaction was that this is a man who gets sued (and must somehow win) a lot! I told BEN, as sincerely-sounding as possible that I appreciated his help and looked forward to this concluding today. At this point, there’s no point in antagonizing a man who apparently doesn’t care about anything: police, civil charges, breach of contracts, customer service, business reputation, etc. Although, my signature is only on the papers I signed when the move began and I had NOT been given a copy of those papers yet. All I had been given was a receipt for my charge.
I called my father to update him and he wanted to talk to BEN himself. I don’t know why he wanted to waste his time- and I had already- but he wanted to try. He called BEN and told him that if the truck didn’t arrive by 2PM we would absolutely not accept delivery, and that they would have to instead deliver it during the week in the morning.
At 12.15PM I hadn’t heard anything yet. I called BEN and he said he would call NISSAN to see when he would be over at my place and that he would call me back. In the meantime I decided to inspect what they had delivered. I inspected my bed headboard, which is a tall wooden frame with two thick marble pillars on the side. Upon inspection, the right pillar is cracked 100% through. The pillar is at least 3 inches in diameter. I contacted BEN with the news. He told me we were insured for that and everything would be taken care of when I called their claims department Monday. I told him that the included $.60/pound likely would not cover a replacement for bed’s headboard. He said he could also offer me two dinner passes to Benihannas restaurant because it’s in Cupertino close by and it’s “really good”. No, I am not making this up. He’s continued to patronize me throughout this ordeal.
I also told him that I reviewed our contract, and that they guarantee on-day service. My day was October 13th, and even before the police arrived, it was Sunday October 14th (4AM). Now it is 1PM on Sunday and still no one is officially scheduled to be here. I told him that the contract he was hiding behind had already been breached by their lack of delivery completion on Saturday, October 13th. He got more defensive and made more excuses.
I called BEN every five minutes from 1:00PM to 1:30PM. He didn’t answer. Finally at 1:30PM I got a call from the move team saying they were ready and that they would be there in fifteen minutes. Thirty minutes later the crew arrived. They began unloading the truck and bringing it up to my apartment. The moving continued mostly without incident. I was so worried about how this would go that I called DEPUTY LEUCK back and asked him that if things got confrontational, if I could call him for assistance. He said that would be fine and he would be happy to come if the situation arose.
Eventually, the movers decided to disassemble my desk (without asking me if that was OK prior, as I was upstairs watching the apartment) before bringing it up. I inspected it after they reassembled it again and had placed it against the wall. I could see damage to the back of the desk that they apparently weren’t planning on telling me about. Essentially, instead of unscrewing the back part off properly, they ripped it off, and in the process destroyed the hinges that hold it to the top flat part of the desk, and stripped all the wood off the back that was next to the screws. After that, I asked them mostly to bring what was left upstairs. At this point I had all my possessions more or less in place, I was ready to end this nightmare.
We wrapped up with the paperwork. First, I presented the lead mover, NISSAN, with a sheet I had created which documented the damage to my apartment and possessions during their move. I asked NISSAN to initial by the list of the items, print his name, date and sign- he did. NISSAN asked me to sign the moving document that acknowledged I received my possessions. I did.
NISSAN had a document that stated (basically) I agreed that the move did not exceed $1700.00. Confused, I asked him where this figure came from. He said that upon seeing my apartment initially this was his estimate. I asked him if he was supposed to show this to me before the move began and he said no. I asked him why not since this seems important. He had no response. There were two places to sign on the document, and I am assuming one is for before the move begins, and one to verify once the move is completed. I told him there was no point in a document being signed after the fact that said we were under an arbitrary amount that I was never informed of. I told him I would not sign the form, and I did not.
Lastly, NISSAN had a survey type form that detailed the service and asked me to sign it. Things like “I am satisfied with the service; my possessions were not damaged, etc”. I amended this document by writing in the facts of the move, then initialed them, and signed it. I had the driver make me a copy of that sheet before they left.
Among other things, I’ll be filing a complaint with the better business bureau. I know what my course of action is going to be, but I’m not posting it here- yet. For now, here are some pictures:
The cracked marble pillar on my bed’s headboard:
Dent in the wall:
Rips in the mattresses:
A box marked Fragile at the bottom of a book of boxes and a printer:









October 15, 2007 at 1:35 pm
oh tamas.
want me to come back and kick someones ass? i forwarded your email with this link on to my cousin to see if she has anything to say in the matter… and if anything, she can related with some items that have been delivered here. sorry you had to go through that. but, on the other hand, i almost wish i could have been there for that.
i’ll forward it onto my sister as well as she’s pretty good on how to go about this stuff.
love your face,
bannie
October 15, 2007 at 2:25 pm
Damn cousin I am so sorry you had to go through that shit!! Do you need me to put out a few hits?
October 15, 2007 at 4:24 pm
I hope you sue their asses.
October 15, 2007 at 4:36 pm
you’re right. like a train wreck. i wanted to stop but couldn’t. sound’s like you’ve got it covered…
and i always thought it would be easier to just hire a company to move.
October 15, 2007 at 5:35 pm
Tom I’d certainly stop payment on the credit card… But you should try to compromise with this company. Even though what they did was bullshit it’s possible there were things going on outside of their control - maybe the customer before you was a huge asshole or something.
You should try to compromise with them. They probably think they did the best they could, and would’ve had to pay massive amounts of overtime to those movers, so they’re probably out money too. Don’t pay the $1700, but send them a letter (writing!) saying that given the departure from the original contract and the amount of damage and inconvenienced caused to you that you’d be willing to pay a lesser fee. You’re going to have to compromise and probably pay more than initially stated even with the damage, but that’s kind of a given.
Furthermore if it ends up going to court (if they refuse to compromise and decide to sue you for the full amount) it’d be HUGE in your favor if you had documented a summary and a willingness to compromise in a letter.
October 15, 2007 at 5:37 pm
Why do I sense your story being on the Consumerist this week for some reason?
October 16, 2007 at 1:39 am
Oh god im so sorry to hear about that!!
That is the worst moving story ive heard - i really hope you sue their asses!
When i moved i used moveme.com to help me choose removers, and read all the reviews and stuff… i just feel lucky now that the company i used lived up to their reputation!
Take care, i hope you get this sorted out.
October 16, 2007 at 4:59 am
Thats awful, I hope everything works out. Take them to Judge Judy!!
October 16, 2007 at 5:14 am
Sorry you went through that. We just moved to the Sacramento area from the NYC area back in August and Mayflower moving completely screwed us by not delivering our stuff for about one month. They showed up 6 hours late the first day, broke stuff, treated us shabbily etc etc. After two moves, I think the whole industry is full of crooks. How much incentive do they really have to take care of you and your stuff?
Ah anyways — if they’d tacked on an experience like yours on top of my living on lawn furniture in an empty apartment for close to a month….oooooohhh the agony.
October 16, 2007 at 5:15 am
I can barely believe what a nightmare that was. What a ghetto operation! Do you think you will get anywhere with a suit, though?
Miss E.
October 16, 2007 at 5:26 am
I am so sorry about your move! I just moved across country, and got fucked while doing it. And I didn’t do NEARLY the research you did to find a good firm. I packed everything myself, and they just moved it. Luckily my stuff arrived undamaged. but I got royally FUCKED on charges. It ended up being more than a grand more than “estimated” and I too had issues getting in touch with dispatch.
October 16, 2007 at 10:18 am
>_<. Are the movers bonded? Can’t you get monetary value for the damages.
October 16, 2007 at 10:55 am
There are really only two ways to avoid this kind of problem.
#1 is to go with a top-tier corporate moving service like Mayflower, and be prepared to pay in the range of $5000 for a full-service move. That’s about what it costs to have a reputable company do the whole thing for an average 2-br apartment, with in-house employees, from packers to loaders to drivers. Although it sounds like Jimmy (above) didn’t have nearly the same experience.
#2 is to do most of the packing yourself, get an ABF U-Pack truck, hire a bunch of guys from the Home Depot parking lot, have them load all your sh1t in the truck and then send them home. Stage it so that they drop the trailer on e.g. Friday, and then you move boxes on Saturday and Sunday, and they pick the truck up on Monday. You may need to get a permit to park the trailer on the street for a couple of days, both at origin and destination, but it’s totally worth it to have flexibility and control over the situation. When you get to where you’re going and ABF delivers the trailer, hire a different bunch of guys from the Home Depot parking lot or the local yellow pages to unpack the truck.
We moved from the bay area to Oregon like this last year, and I though it was great. Never had any worries about where stuff was or when it was going to be delivered to the new house, and we saved tons of money over all but the most disreputable quotes I got from “moving coordinators.”
Decoupling the loading from the driving puts you back in control of the situation, and you still don’t have to drive the truck. What none of these shady businesses tell you is that it’s not their employees doing the job. It’s a guy on the phone running a bunch of independant contractors and taking a giant cut in return for lousy customer service. Once you’ve handed control over to the guy on the phone, you’re f?*ked.
October 16, 2007 at 12:39 pm
damn, that’s crazy. Like I’d expect some general shittiness but that boarders on intentional, out-to-get you sort of stuff.
October 19, 2007 at 5:35 pm
Jesus Christ. That blows, my friend. =( Hope you nail their asses to the wall!
November 1, 2007 at 2:41 pm
I am so grateful that you created this blog! I had a similar nightmare of an experience - I lost everything I own to this company. Here is the story I posted on Rip-Off Report:
I had the misfortune of hiring Champions Movers, Inc. to assist in my interstate move in June of 2007. Prior to the pick up date I received a quote in the amount of $1,070 - half of which was to be paid at the time of pick up, the other half upon arrival. However, once my things were loaded and locked on their truck, the 2 movers demanded $2,460 on the spot - well over the 110% rule allowed by law. Of course I refused citing the terms of the contract, but they threateningly stated that they didn’t know what they would do with my things unless I paid and signed their “new” contract right then. A contract completely different that the one I had seen before. Afraid for my things and for my safety at that point, I signed and paid but then immediately put a stop payment on the check.
The next morning I drove to their office in Fremont to resolve the issue with the manager, BEN, only to find to my horror that the address did not exist. It was a strip mall with no matching suite number or P.O. Box. Alarmed, I immediately drove to their physical address (listed and licensed with the California Public Utility Commission): 453 Queens Lane, San Jose, CA 94539, and of course found that that address did not exist either. It turned out to be a PG&E meter. When I called asking for their location they flat out refused to tell me. At that point I notified them that I wanted to cancel the entire deal and offered them $500 to just tell me where my things were so I could pick them up and do the move myself. They again refused, and said I would still have to pay at least a couple thousand dollars.
Outraged, I began calling every consumer agency, government agency, and the media for assistance, only to be told that this was a “civil” matter and they couldn’t (more like wouldn’t) get involved. Since when is extortion merely a civil matter? Frustrated and not knowing who to be more mad at - the people that were supposed to help me and wouldn’t, or the people that wronged me in the first place, I took it upon myself to research Champions more intently. I soon came to notice that many people on the internet claimed that Champions Movers was in fact the same company A.S.A.P Relocations (which has been blacklisted with over 98 complaints on the Better Business Bureau). They simply just changed their name so they could continue running their scams under the radar. Well I was able to obtain conclusive evidence that undeniably supports this.
Champions Movers continually claim that A.S.A.P Relocations just happens to be next door at 455 Queens Lane, but fiercely deny any affiliation. While I was checking into Champions non-existent address at 453 Queens Lane, I also looked into the property at 455 Queens Lane which sure enough did not belong to A.S.A.P Relocations either. The current CFO at that property provided me with a signed statement which states that he owns or leases the entire street from 437 to 455 Queens Lane and that Champions Movers had never existed there. Upon further investigation I found a listing in the 2007 Yellow Pages online with Champions Movers address listed at: 2295 Ringwood Avenue, San Jose, CA 95131, which is the SAME ADDRESS listed on A.S.A.P Relocation’s current website. Also, the truck that the movers came to pick up our things with had A.S.A.P Relocations written on it, and if you call Champions Movers answering machine you will get a recording that says A.S.A.P. Relocations. It doesn’t take a genius to put two and two together. Well I went to the Ringwood address and sure enough there was an unmarked office with storage pods in the back, which is where I am absolutely certain that Champions Movers/A.S.A.P Relocations holds hostage many of their clients belongings.
Since Champions Movers has a non-existing physical address which it is licensed under with the CPUC, as well a non-existing contact address in Fremont which is listed on their contracts, how are they able to legally operate? They do not have one legitimate address where they can be contacted other than the one they share with A.S.A.P Relocation on Ringwood Avenue. I along with many other people have been victimized by this company because they are allowed to simply change their name and continue running their scams.
I have had my things held hostage by Champions Movers since June, and over the course of that time their monetary demands only increased drastically (I believe the last was over $10,000). Of course I refused their outrageous demands and continually offered the original quoted price of $1070 for the return of my things, but of course that wasn’t enough for them… and they didn’t even move my things! They are scam artists in the truest sense and are completely incapable of reasonable negotiation. They will do whatever it takes to get your money -extortion however, seems to be there method of choice.
I have since moved with nothing but my car and have had to start completely over. Now it is my mission to do whatever it takes to get the word out and make sure this doesn’t happen to anyone else. I urge everyone out there to use your resources to help stop this company from ruining the lives of more innocent people - It truly is ultimately up to us as consumers to protect each other from these malicious crimes.
November 3, 2007 at 11:53 am
From personal experience even the most reputable movers can be a big headache. Delayed move dates/acceptance dates, home and furniture damages, even outright burglary ( my family in one move lost approximately $600 worth of belongings in one move) my advice is keep everything you want safe with you when you move, watch your movers ( always having someone keeping track of items , I know Atlas gives you an item by item check off sheet) and just keeping proactive about things.
November 3, 2007 at 5:02 pm
That bites, bro. See, here’s yet another advantage of being Chinese: you’re too cheap to hire movers. You ever see those music videos where the one guy is about to get into a fight, so he makes one phone call, and then 16 modded Honda Civics appear packed with guys (all cousins)? That’s pretty much how yours truly does all his moves.
The Home Depot idea sounds promising too …
November 16, 2007 at 2:39 pm
I was a lucky one to cancel my move through Nationwide Relocation Services before they took over the move. But I did find out that our mover would have been ATOPPS. After reading this blog, I am even more relieved that I cancelled. We did lose our deposit at this point, but have it in dispute. I have never been through something so awful in my life. It is a real shame that this keeps going on and on with many more victims everyday. And I was shocked to learn the BBB was NO help in verifying the quality these companies would offer in service. One company was given an A- and they were the source of many horror stories. What a shame…
December 26, 2007 at 5:04 pm
Regarding ASAP and Champion Movers in San Jose:
Has anyone thought of starting a Class Action Suit against these companies?
Just Curious…
January 16, 2008 at 4:11 am
[...] saga (full story here) with the worst company in the bay area- CHAMPIONS MOVERS (Fremont, CA)- has continued for the last [...]
February 12, 2008 at 6:30 pm
I would like to share a really bad experience too; I move from Washington DC, on December 2006. My moving company Blue-move International Relocation (www.blue-move.com) was hired to move door to door to Puerto Ordaz, Venezuela. This company hired a local mover to get our things from Caracas to the mentioned city; they were in charge not only to deliver everything to our home, but to assemble everything too (that didn’t happen). We start having troubles with the local company (Truparca-EPWS INTERNATIONAL MOVERS, C.A.) because they wanted to charge us for some additional non specific taxes. We have to wait a long time having our move at the port, saying that the authorities where trying to make us pay additional taxes. One day they called us saying that they resolve all the problems and that we have to pay to their account so they can take everything to our city. We were really innocent and we just made the deposit. We were suspicious and we ask for the port bills and the governmental taxes and we discovered that we were charged around 8000$ more than we should.
Blue-move never took charge or resolved anything to this matter, even if we hired them, not the local company.
I just want to let everyone know about the lack of responsibility of Blue-move and just in case somebody is moving to Venezuela, of Truparca - EPWS International Movers.
I was pregnant at the time of the move, so when everything happened I just wanted to finish. I didn’t do anything because I had my baby, plus I’m in Venezuela, but now I’m writing in every web page I see.
Thanks for the opportunity!
February 24, 2008 at 6:07 pm
Just wondered how things are going for you now Thomas. My move was not a nightmare because I pulled out from NRS and got a very reliable mover. In fact they even moved us back after three months. But the experience I had has kept me following the blog and the comments on movingscam.com. I was lucky to also get back one of the two deposits they wrongly charged me, but promised me five months ago. It got lost in the paper shuffle in the office. LOL.. I also was given a copy of a paper that I would not have seen unless I completed the move with them that stated the mover contracted to do the actual move would be paid an additional $1,035 on delivery. So I guess I ended up saving even more. But was led to believe what I paid NRS was all I had to pay. Be VERY cautious about hiring a moving company. I was really a lucky one.
April 7, 2008 at 3:01 pm
Hello,
I saw your yelp about this company along with fellow yelpers with similar complaints. anyways if it makes you feel any better they have lost a potential customer and possibly more because any chance I get I will tell someone else and you know how word about bad businesses travel fast.
GOOD LUCK!
May 21, 2008 at 6:03 am
I used a website called Helpiammoving.com. found three removal companies in my zip code area and got three quotes for free. They also have testimonials re companies but I got all three to visit me first so I could meet them and got all information in writing. Very pleased with the company I went with. Trek In London, very helpful and polite. I also found the Helpiammoving site really useful for checklists and their free address change service which is done online. Hope this helps