Feb 14th, 2007
USA Locksmith
This letter describes an extremely negative experience a friend had with USA Locksmith:
On Wednesday February 14, 2007 I locked myself out of my apartment in Boston, MA. After being locked out, I borrowed a friend’s phone and called the USA Locksmith Boston office to help me with my situation. When asked how much it would cost, the representative told me they were unable to provide me with a total estimate, but did state that there would be a minimum fee of $39.95, and that an additional fee for labor would be assessed. I was then told that a representative would be dispatched shortly.
About 40 minutes later, the representative arrived at my apartment. After a brief inspection, the locksmith quoted me a price of $145.00, which would be assessed on top of the $39.95 base fee. As a single female with no personal contacts in the direct area, and with the work day almost completed, I felt compelled to agree to the fee. The locksmith promptly placed some sort of key into the keyhole on the door and tapped on it about ten times or so. After a few moments, he turned the key and opened the door.
Shortly thereafter, the locksmith insisted that I pay him the full amount in cash. As a single female student living alone, I do not make it a practice of carrying very much cash with me at any given time. I asked if I could pay with a credit card or a check and was promptly told that I could only pay with cash. The locksmith asked to see my license. Upon turning my license over, the locksmith told me that he would hold onto it until I paid him the full amount he was owed in cash. I desperately searched for an ATM in the direct vicinity, withdrew the cash and gave it to him.
I am writing this letter of complaint for the following three reasons:
- I feel that the refusal on the part of USA Locksmith to provide a cost estimate is a violation of my rights as a consumer. Additionally, the practice of providing a base fee of $39.95 and then an additional fee of $145.00 upon ‘inspection’, to a desperate consumer, is an unethical practice. Particularly when the total time require to open the lock was only a few minutes.
- Forcing a consumer to pay $185.00 in cash seems to be an unfair business practice. Particularly because later, when I called USA Locksmith, I was told that it was their policy to allow customers to pay with a credit card.
- Finally, The locksmith had absolutely no right to confiscate my drivers license and hold it hostage until I paid him $185 in cash. This was an act of intimidation, as well as illegal. When considering the fact that I am a relatively small single female (5’4), it is clear that this was his way of intimidating me into paying him in cash.
I have suffered loss of money as well as psychological harm as a result of the acts of USA Locksmith and the contractor they dispatched to my residence. I fully intend to file a report with the Better Business Bureau, the Federal Trade Commission, as well as the Boston Attorney’s General Office; as well as pursue legal action.
I would hope that others might learn from this experience and avoid doing business with USA Locksmith in the future.
“I am writing this letter of complaint for the following three reasons:
I feel that the refusal on the part of USA Locksmith to provide a cost estimate is a violation of my rights as a consumer. Additionally, the practice of providing a base fee of $39.95 and then an additional fee of $145.00 upon ‘inspection’, to a desperate consumer, is an unethical practice. Particularly when the total time require to open the lock was only a few minutes.”
Wow, quite the socialist aren’t we. Your rights as a consumer are to call another locksmith if the one you like won’t give you an estimate. You choose to have them come out on site knowing that they wouldn’t give you a cost estimate, yet then bashed them for it despite them helping you in what appears to be a desperate time of need. You also might want to work on your negotiating skills. He had driven all the way to you, so he obviously would have spent 5 minutes opening the lock even if you had only offered him $50 to open it. I will admit that him holding your drivers license was wrong
I wasn’t there dude, it was Marisa - a petite single young female. I think he used a lot of very intimidating tactics in dealing with her and that is why I got up in arms about the situation. If it was me I would have probably told the guy to go f@#k himself.
I know it wasn’t you, I was just pointing out the flaw in her argument that her rights as a consumer were violated. This type of socialist talk freaks me out.