No, nothing good at all.
I had several people call or PM me and explain his situation and offer to try to contact him and get my gun and clear his name.
So far none of them have called back. I suspect that his reponse to them wasn't what they expected to hear.
Or he may be working out of the country and they haven't reached him yet.
But none of them have notified me that, for example, he'll be back in 2 weeks and they'll let me know.
I'm afraid the problem seems to be Mr. Reynerson turned an ethical corner some time back when he decided to get out of the gunsmith business, but to hedge his bets (or for the future owner of the company) he kept taking in jobs even though he had moved on (apparently overseas).
The Yelp reviews I saw mirrored my experience in spite of the fact that lots of people vouch for him. Apparently something changed.
The guns were supposedly taken care of for him when the flood happened, but those of us that didn't beat down his door (trying to be considerate and patient with the flood victims) have gotten screwed.
I assume that Mr. Reynerson thinks one of two things: either by waiting we abandonned the property, or he is entitled to the guns based on labor he performed and hadn't gotten paid for at the time of the flood.
Again I don't see it that way. Especially with firearms.
I'm still hoping one of the friends will have some luck, but it's a little less hope each day.
Von
I had several people call or PM me and explain his situation and offer to try to contact him and get my gun and clear his name.
So far none of them have called back. I suspect that his reponse to them wasn't what they expected to hear.
Or he may be working out of the country and they haven't reached him yet.
But none of them have notified me that, for example, he'll be back in 2 weeks and they'll let me know.
I'm afraid the problem seems to be Mr. Reynerson turned an ethical corner some time back when he decided to get out of the gunsmith business, but to hedge his bets (or for the future owner of the company) he kept taking in jobs even though he had moved on (apparently overseas).
The Yelp reviews I saw mirrored my experience in spite of the fact that lots of people vouch for him. Apparently something changed.
The guns were supposedly taken care of for him when the flood happened, but those of us that didn't beat down his door (trying to be considerate and patient with the flood victims) have gotten screwed.
I assume that Mr. Reynerson thinks one of two things: either by waiting we abandonned the property, or he is entitled to the guns based on labor he performed and hadn't gotten paid for at the time of the flood.
Again I don't see it that way. Especially with firearms.
I'm still hoping one of the friends will have some luck, but it's a little less hope each day.
Von