YourNameHere-
You state the truth. I just went through a major chargeback fraud case here in an international transaction.
Mark_AR What you state was not what actually happened in my recent M/C case. The chargeback was reversed and the funds returned to the cardholder's bank. The Bank of the cardholder is the one who is out the money until the chargeback is put through as in my case the cardholder was disputing the charge so he didn't ever pay his bill. Next I challenged it with the exact procedure dictated by my clearing house fraud agent. It took 30 days for the funds to be returned to my account. BUT it then was still not over. The clearing house slapped a 45 day freeze on those funds in my account so I couldn't have access to them anyway. During the 45 days the Cardholder's Bank goes after their customer for additional proof to challenge my docs and proff the charge was legit. After 45 days with no further evidence that the docs I submitted are false, the case is closed and the freeze is lifted from my account. Furthermore, this case's first challenged transaction went back 4 months. There is supposed to be a 60 day discovery period but considering it was an international sale that didn't apply. I don't know what the statute of limitation is on international discovery period but it must be longer than 4 months!
YourName- I disagree with you about not fighting the small claims. If many those claims are legit, that's one thing (you need to clean up YOUR act) but if you are being ripped off, you probably have greater loss than you realize. Did you ever consider that the clearing house you use is charging you a premium disc rate because your account is high risk by the track record that charge backs are being filed and are not being challenged? I've only ever had a few chargebacks but I challenged every one and won every case small and most certainly this last large one. According to my rep, when you have a perfect track record for not ever having valid chargebacks you are given much lower disc rates, even for high risk mail order / Internet sales.
Mark_AR I don't see how your employer got the charge to stick after 6 months. I am required to submit the charge no sooner than the day of shipment and no later than 30 days or the CC charge may not be used without a delayed invoicing submitted to the purchaser. Maybe you meant to say that they held the funds in the account for a period of 6 months so they would be there in the event of chargeback. I'm sure they processed the charge in a reasonable time period.
I'm sorry you got burned for the back pay. I hiope you turned the matter over to the State dept of labor for action. You will get paid or your employer will go to jail. Even if he went bankrupt the employees are FIRST to get paid ahead of all debtors! If not then there must be something else to the story. If you were an independent contractor, then well, get in line.
dept of labor won't help you. I think you need to talk to an attorney and get your money!