I bought a money making package from him, it was people who didn't get
their refund checks from HUD because they moved and HUD lost track of
them. It was a government system in which anyone who tracks them down
and notifies HUD can get a percentage for tracking the person down to
get them their check. Course the catch is it's completely volentary as
to whether those people sent you a percentage of their refund check or
not. I tried it for a few days. Most people you talk to think it's a
scam, sometimes you're talking to the wrong person by the same name and
they want you to send them the check anyway. Don Lapre figured out it
wasn't cost effective, so he packaged it and sold the system (that the
government set up). He also sent the same lists of refund check
recepients to the people who bought the system, so a lot of people in
the list were getting multiple calls from several people trying the
system. It was a big mess :o/
Mark Thorson <nospam@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> Ed Burke wrote:
> >
> > <a href="http://www.dontforgettotakeyourvitamins.com/burke2442">
>
> About this web site, quoting from:
> http://www.quackwatch.org/11Ind/lapre.html
>
> Don Lapre is a fast-talking character who has been selling
> "get rich" op****tunities for many years. His infomercials describe
> how, while living in a "tiny one-bedroom apartment, "he
> became a millionaire by placing hundreds of "tiny little ads" in
> newspapers. Doug Grant is a "nutritionist" who claims to have
> vast experience in advising people about health and fitness.
> Recently, they teamed up to promote "The Greatest Vitamin
> in the World," which Grant re****tedly formulated and Lapre is
> marketing through infomercials and Web sites. This article
> analyzes their current sales pitch and explains why we believe you
> should ignore their advice.


|