Steer clear of freecig.com - they're running a "free cig but pay £40 a month for three day's worth of carts" scam. A friend was daft enough to get suckered, and she's now £160 out of pocket, and hasn't even got the e-cig to show for it.
My partner and I were in the Millgate Shopping Centre, Bury, Lancashire. There was a popular trading stall with two sales representatives showing members of the public an electronic cigarette, which is a battery operated device that vapourises a nicotine based substance and provides the customer with the experience of smoking without the health implications.
The trader was advertising a 7 day free trial of the product, which we signed up for after speaking to the sales representative Mary. We completed the form, providing switch card details and bank account details and were told that we would be charged £6.99 for postage of the trial pack and if we were not satisfied we could return the product within 7 days and would not be charged any further.
The trial pack arrived by recorded delivery on 29th September 2009 and it contained the 'e cigarette', a USB charger, 5 loose packed refill cartridges and a blister pack of 5 nicotine free refill cartridges. The only paperwork was a scruffy A5 printed note telling us to enjoy our trial.
I noticed that the device had attached to it a blank plastic tube and not a proper cartridge, so I opened just one of the loose packed nicotine cartridges and tried the product, which seemed to work OK but was not what we expected. We decided to return the product and end our free trial.
As there was nothing in the delivered pack saying how to go about returning the pack we referred to our original signed agreement. To cancel it explained that we had to call an 0844 number, obtain a cancellation code, write this on the form, pack the product and form in an envelope and deliver it back to April Marketing within 7 days by recorded delivery.
What has concerned me is that the terms of the contract were clearly unfair, in that they only offered 7 calendar days, not working days, to return the product. In small print it also explained that to adhere by the cancellation policy no refill cartridges should have been used, however we had to use one to actually trial the product!
Following that it stated that any breach of these instructions would cost us £19.99 for payment of the pack sent and would also automatically sign us up to the home delivery service. The cost for this is £49.99 + £6.99 postage + VAT for a 30 cartridge refill pack and then £49.99 a month thereafter. The agreement made it next to impossible not to breach the cancellation policy and as such meant that they would attempt to obtain the above costs by charging our switch card or sending a standing order instruction to the bank.
As what they were doing was clearly unfair, preying on less observant consumers and overcharging for a product that wasnt even wanted we cancelled our card and instructed the bank not to set up any standing orders. We had already been charged £6.99 + VAT for the original trial pack and accept that this money has gone.
April Marketing advertise 2 websites for this scam, freecig.com and trendycig.co.uk. I conducted a whois domain name search on each freecig.com showed the register of the domain name being April Marketing, created 14th July 2009. Trendycig.co.uk showed the registrant to be Sphere Marketing, created 29th July 2009. Whilst April Marketing do not seem to be known at all, a quick internet search on Sphere Marketing brings up many web pages in connection with a male named Graeme Ross, who has defrauded many others through various other scams, namely a well publicised Google Adwords scam. The addresses shown for Sphere Marketing is the same address for April Marketing:
Unit 11 St Georges Court
St Georges Park
Kirkham
Preston
PR4 2EF