Monday, March 9, 2009

Of Cons and Coins


If you get into this game you are reminded every so often that many people covet what you have, and some are willing to try and take what they want.

It’s the not-so-gentile side of antique collecting. We don’t talk about it much, but it’s there. There are a lot of unsavory types in the world, particularly in these tough financial times, who are looking for “soft” targets.

Antique dealers are considered “soft targets.”

That’s why a colleague here in Northern California left his home one day to find a man waiting for him outside. There was an altercation, a stun gun was produced (not by our colleague) and the man was pushed back into his apartment, bound with duct tape and forced to stand by while this miscreant pillaged the dealer’s coin collection.

This appears to be happening more and more frequently as dealers advertise to meet buyers are lured to remote locations and are robbed, usually of money (why doesn’t that hurt as much as when they take our antiques?).

So, we’re getting cautious and taking steps to protect ourselves, our homes looking like armed camps even though we don’t keep anything of any real value there. I have a small safe in my place. I like it for its California feel and keep my scotch in it, and that’s all.

Many of us are loners, single men or women who like old things and perhaps don’t relate well to the modern world. It can be a problem.

We buy the cameras and the safes and all the rest, and try not to think about what can go wrong – until it does. Until then we share our love for old things with others we hope are likeminded.

It’s all we can do.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

This can happen when selling anything of value. If the item is small enough, take it with you and meet someone at a public location...maybe a coffee shop.

J.D. said...

Hello, AT, thanks for writing!

This is a practice we employ when doing business. We once sold a rather nice, rather expensive Civil War musket in the parking lot of a local police station: buyer and seller counting off money as officers walked by.

Safety first. We just hate hearing stories of "colleagues" getting hurt/taken in the process.

Stay safe!