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Review 2/28/2010
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I received a phone call October 2009 from an agent representing himself as a third party source for American Express. As a preferred cardholder they wanted to offer me a free gift from Belisi. I said no. I received a call from his supervisor who promised me that the gift was free of charge and that I would not have to do anything or pay anything. I told him I was not interested in trials where I would have to cancel a subscription. He assured me that I would not be signed up for a membership and would not have to make any additional phone calls, so I said sure. I received a small sample product of Belisi's Miracle DNA cream. I have never heard of this company or brand of products. The next month I see a $7.95 charge on my credit card. I disputed it right away. With the holidays I had not checked each line on my credit card statement, but sure enough there was a charge in December for $69.98. I only bothered looking so diligently because I received a package in February from Belisi. And of course, in January and February there were charges for $49.98. These charges were NEVER authorized by me. The invoice that came with this months package says "This order has been paid by American Express. You are a VIP Savings Club Member. Your next VIP Savings shipment is scheduled to process on 3/11/2010." This is the only product or statement I have ever received outside of the "free gift." I have a dispute open with American Express and plan on calling Belisi during regular business hours. Never accept free gifts from people saying they are from or work with your credit card company. It is fraud. Also, look at your statements regularly to look for fraudulent charges.
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