EverBright Smiles Scam

Is There Any Truth to This Claim? Simply Put.. No

A typical EverBright Smiles Scam has the story of a customer who claims that he was charged 75 dollars for EverBright whitening product which he claims that he never ordered. He goes on to say that their website doesn't even exist because he went there. The confused person who is claiming that EverBright whitening is a scam demands from his bank that the funds withdrawn by the nonexistent party to whom he gave his personal bank card number to be criminally charged and that his money be immediately returned. His bank card assures him that they will cancel his credit card and send him a new card within two days, but they can do nothing about refunding him his money.

Click Here to Try EverBright Smiles Now

So Is There a EverBright Smiles Scam?

The amusing part of this so called scam is the obvious obliviously to reality person who is claiming that someone scammed him by using his card. His card with his number is in his possession. To have been debited any charge with his number means that he gave that party his number. If he had claimed that he was promised a free promotional product and would be charged if he did not cancel at a specified time, and that they had not waited for the proper time to elapse, he would have more validity in claiming fraud. But, that is not the case if you order a product and then refuse to pay for it when it is shipped and your next not free product has been arranged to be shipped.

The scam here is with the person who thought he would get away with a free product and a second product and just cancel the card or yell scam. His story does not hold up to being a scam because his credit card was not stolen and he must have given someone on the site that he said doesn't exist because he went there, his credit card number.

Many of these scam screamers would be better off contacting EverBright directly and letting the company know of their disappointment in their product or some other reason for wanting their money returned instead of making up stories that can be easily debunked by the person to whom you are yelling that you have been scammed. Why would an organization that can bill you 75 dollars for their product shut down their entire web site and put up another website just to get your 75 dollars.

An online website costs quite a bit of money to set up and to operate following Internet protocol. Now, if thousands of customers had yelled that they had been charged 75 dollars for an EverBright whitening product, they would be more believable especially if they too gave their credit card number from a credit card which is still in their possession to a non existent EverBright website.