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Tom Mckenzie

Tom Mckenzie

www.tjmckenzie.com
What is your customer experience with Tom Mckenzie?

Tom Mckenzie Overview

The generated data is based on reviews and questionnaires provided by PissedConsumer.com users.

Based on reviews, created with AI
Rating Distribution

Tom Mckenzie has a 1.0 star rating from 1 review; consumers are mostly dissatisfied and a recent recommendation states "Don't trust this person".

Positive Feedback

No positive experiences are reported in the available reviews; there are no endorsements of service or transactions.

Negative Feedback / Risk Areas

  • Reports of withheld possession after payment and disputed title transfers, which appear in Tom Mckenzie customer complaints.
  • Allegations of upfront fees and deceptive lending practices and aggressive debt collection.
  • Concerns related to billing and inability to secure refunds after payment.

Key Takeaways for Future Customers

  • Consult Tom Mckenzie reviews and verify title transfer before paying.
  • Avoid paying fees in advance and document all communications.
  • Confirm customer service responsiveness and consider legal advice if transactions feel fraudulent.
View full overview ›

Media from reviews

Tom Mckenzie - This person has possession of my truck
Tom Mckenzie - This person has possession of my truck - Image 2
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Corey P Aew

This review is written by an individual who has purchased the reviewed product/service and/or confirms being a paying customer of this company. Check our FAQ

Verified Buyer

This person has possession of my truck

stars-rating-full stars-rating-full stars-rating-full stars-rating-full stars-rating-full
AI Highlights
  • - Bought truck for $2000; seller wouldn't accept pay by check until after it cleared.
  • - Funds were withdrawn and the check processed; seller then refused check.
  • - Title and registration are in my name; I need possession within 24 hours or I'll report it stolen.
Tom Mckenzie - This person has possession of my truck
Tom Mckenzie - This person has possession of my truck - Image 2

I bought a truck off of him for 2000 he didn't tell me he wouldn't take a check until after I sent it to him and after the money was withdrawed for my bank account and the check was processed and being sent to him then he wanted to go to say he don't take a check the truck is paid for the truck is mine me and him already went to the BMV and put the title in the registration into my name and I need possession of my vehicle within the next 24 hours or I'm reporting it stolen

Loss:
$2000

Preferred solution: Deliver product or service ordered

User's recommendation: Don't trust this person

View full review
bigtimetoot

Prospexx Tom McKenzie

AI Highlights
  • - They lent money in 2006 and pursued us for 20 days.
  • - We weren't given any grace period and nearly lost our home.
  • - Threatened to seize our home.

This company lent us money in 2006, and when our company got into trouble they went after us when we were only 20 days late in paying. We felt we should have at least 90 days grace.

Not so, nearly lost our home. Most uncomfortable position. Our company has failed now, and he threatened to take our house if we did not pay.

We have paid, but very ignorant people. I see the postings on the Internet, and I agree, just because they provide successful funding does not mean they can take advantage, when we could not pay.Craig Elliot

View full review
3 comments
Guest

I am pleased to see one case where funding was provided. This lends some credibility to Prospexx.

Non payment has its consequences no matter where you are so I don't have a lot of sympathy for the complaint.

Guest

This Craig Elliot lizard did not deserve anything. He was a pain in the *** from the time he received a loan through us.

A real consumer advocate. Told us after the fact that we could not charge him the interest rate and late penalties we were charging him. I would have liked to have tossed him, but he gave up and paid us off, with penalty early on. I call them lot lawyers from the old days in the car business.

They like to tell us what we can and can't do.

If they knew what they were talking about they would have their own money, and would not be at my door whining. Nice to see a compliment about us like this.

Guest

UNLAWFUL DEFAMATION

It is a general doctrine of law in all jurisdictions that making false public

statements against a person or firm is illegal. Commonly known as “slander” (when

verbal) or “libel” (when written), false statements to damage someone’s reputation is

called “defamation”. Defamation is defined by various laws in clear and uniform

terms: “Provably false statements of verifiable fact, that serve to undermine or

damage someone’s reputation.” It is no defence to phrase a false statement as an

“opinion”, one’s “own experience”, or as some alleged “consumer complaint”. As

long as the comments contain some false statements of fact that could be verified as

false and could or should be known to be false, then it is defamation, and it is illegal.

All defamation is illegal, and law suits against false defamers are highly

successful and collect substantial damages from the wrongdoers. Written

defamation (which applies to the Internet) is punished harshly, and damages usually

do not need to be proven, as they are assumed by law due to the written exposure to

the public. Defamation falsely accusing of fraud or professional misconduct is even

more severely punished by “treble damages” and “punitive damages”, which can be

enormous amounts of money far beyond any expected real damages to the victim.

All defamation to enforce demands is criminal as extortion or blackmail,

which are serious federal crimes in all countries. Extortion (in the USA), also called

Blackmail (in the UK), is defined in various laws in uniform terms: “Threats or

actions to damage a person’s reputation, to enforce a demand for anything the

person is not obligated to give.” Defamers who use false unlawful defamation on the

Internet, to enforce demands of things not owed to them, are committing a serious

crime. If a person is entitled to something, they are required by law to use normal

lawful “due process of law”, where an independent, objective and impartial court can

apply any signed contract that governs the transaction, if there ever was any. Using

criminal attacks by defamation to circumvent due process of law is highly illegal, and

indicates that the person defaming probably did something illegal or criminal to

sabotage the transaction by his own fault, if there ever was any transaction.

Defamers know that their false statements are illegal, and that false

defamation to enforce unlawful demands is criminal. This is why they make great

efforts to remain anonymous, to avoid both civil and criminal liability. Experience

shows that once an anonymous online defamer can be identified and their identity

exposed by a reply in that forum, they stop, disappear, or begin modifying their

statements to back-track on their lies.

View more comments (2)
jeff Zts

Tom Mckenzie Prospexx Integrated Capital

AI Highlights
  • - He charges fees as a lender who claims to find funds but cannot.
  • - Tom Mckenzie is linked to the scam; uses different sites and Ontario addresses.

This man takes fees under various guises saying he is a reputable lender and can find funds personally and via contacts.He then spends considerable time making out he is going through some sort of process with always the same conclusion that he can not find funds.

Do not pay him fees whoever he says he is in contact with it is a lie and if you have paid him join one of the groups on the Internet that are going to take him to court.

Tom Mckenzie has been doing this for some time with different web sites varying addresses usually Fort Erie or Port Colbourne Ontario Beware it is a long running scam.

Loss:
$10000
View full review
4 comments
Guest

Something has changed but has anything else from what I have seen?

Type his name in your search engine.

The world is avery small place with the Internet.

One can run but they can't hide.

Guest

UNLAWFUL DEFAMATION

It is a general doctrine of law in all jurisdictions that making false public

statements against a person or firm is illegal. Commonly known as “slander” (when

verbal) or “libel” (when written), false statements to damage someone’s reputation is

called “defamation”. Defamation is defined by various laws in clear and uniform

terms: “Provably false statements of verifiable fact, that serve to undermine or

damage someone’s reputation.” It is no defence to phrase a false statement as an

“opinion”, one’s “own experience”, or as some alleged “consumer complaint”. As

long as the comments contain some false statements of fact that could be verified as

false and could or should be known to be false, then it is defamation, and it is illegal.

All defamation is illegal, and law suits against false defamers are highly

successful and collect substantial damages from the wrongdoers. Written

defamation (which applies to the Internet) is punished harshly, and damages usually

do not need to be proven, as they are assumed by law due to the written exposure to

the public. Defamation falsely accusing of fraud or professional misconduct is even

more severely punished by “treble damages” and “punitive damages”, which can be

enormous amounts of money far beyond any expected real damages to the victim.

All defamation to enforce demands is criminal as extortion or blackmail,

which are serious federal crimes in all countries. Extortion (in the USA), also called

Blackmail (in the UK), is defined in various laws in uniform terms: “Threats or

actions to damage a person’s reputation, to enforce a demand for anything the

person is not obligated to give.” Defamers who use false unlawful defamation on the

Internet, to enforce demands of things not owed to them, are committing a serious

crime. If a person is entitled to something, they are required by law to use normal

lawful “due process of law”, where an independent, objective and impartial court can

apply any signed contract that governs the transaction, if there ever was any. Using

criminal attacks by defamation to circumvent due process of law is highly illegal, and

indicates that the person defaming probably did something illegal or criminal to

sabotage the transaction by his own fault, if there ever was any transaction.

Defamers know that their false statements are illegal, and that false

defamation to enforce unlawful demands is criminal. This is why they make great

efforts to remain anonymous, to avoid both civil and criminal liability. Experience

shows that once an anonymous online defamer can be identified and their identity

exposed by a reply in that forum, they stop, disappear, or begin modifying their

statements to back-track on their lies.

Guest

That is the plan and it has Stillwaiting if you would like to be involved and think you cam help join the complaintsboard.com group and you can send a private message to me the more fees that are added together the better it will be We already have so very well documented related costs that this scam has been the direct cause of

Guest

Has anyone started actual legal proceedings against them?? Any class action suits or alerting the Canadian authorities??

View more comments (3)

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