Subscriber Ray Haberman of Naperville booked a Cuba trip
on the Oceanus through Salty Dog Adventures. To get a discount
for full payment in advance, he authorized a $1,999 credit card
payment. Because Salty Dog wasn't handling credit cards at the
time, Haberman's charge was actually processed by The Dive
Shop of St. Louis, which was promoting the trip.
Haberman told us that more than a month before they
scheduled the trip to depart last August, Bolton informed him
The Dive Shop had canceled. When Haberman requested a
refund, Bolton advised him to get it from The Dive Shop. Lisa
Schneider, general manager of The Dive Shop, claims that
although they did indeed process Haberman's charge and issued
him a receipt, they had forwarded the $1,999 to Salty Dog and
therefore were not responsible for a refund.
This is a familiar scenario with the customer being pingponged
between two providers. Haberman has appealed to his
credit card company, the St. Louis Better Business Bureau and
the Attorney General of Missouri, all unsuccessfully.
To complicate matters further, The Dive Shop and Salty Dog
are in litigation. Bolton maintains that the shop canceled its trip
when some clients backed out within the 30-day no-cancellation
period. Lisa Schneider disputes the timing and says her clients
changed their minds when they were advised that the package
wasn't strictly legal in the eyes of OFAC. She declined to comment
further, other than to tell us that one of the shop's employees
had actually gotten busted bringing Cuban goods back from
an earlier Salty Dog familiarization trip. Why she went on to
promote another trip for her customers is anybody's guess.