Is The Salvation Army STILL a Scam?
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Austin Evans·Tech

Is The Salvation Army STILL a Scam?

TL;DR

A follow-up purchase from shopthesalvationarmy.com shows major improvements over last time, but SIM cards, mislabeled items, and doxxed shipping labels reveal lingering problems.

Key Points

  • 1.The Salvation Army responded to the previous video with a formal statement. They acknowledged their standards weren't met, promised factory resets, SIM removal, and hard drive wiping, and invited a follow-up purchase after 30 days.
  • 2.A $71 bulk lot of six Apple devices showed mixed results. Both iPhones were functional but still contained SIM cards; one iPod Touch was locked to an Outlook account and broadcasting its location; the iPad 2 and iPod Nano worked fine.
  • 3.A complete-in-box Xbox 360 with Halo 3 and Hitman: Blood Money was the clear win. Purchased for $83 including shipping, it still had original plastic wrap and booted successfully, making it the best value find of the haul.
  • 4.Austin accidentally paid $89 for a single Pokemon Diamond cartridge in a Pearl box. The listing described 'Pokemon Pearl case and manual, Diamond game cartridge only,' which he misread as a bundle — calling it self-inflicted.
  • 5.A $234 PC gaming lot was the biggest disappointment. The advertised RX 6600 GPU was actually an RX 580, the EVGA power supply box contained a mismatched Seasonic unit with wrong cables (a fire hazard), and a shipping label on the graphics card box publicly doxxed a donor's name and address on the Salvation Army website.
  • 6.Overall verdict: dramatically better than last time, but still not good enough. No items required a police visit this time, but persistent issues — SIM cards left in phones, mislabeled products, and a donor's personal information exposed — show quality control is still inconsistent.

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