Hi Bigboydan
Thank you for the welcome; it is "Miss" by the way *hence my username"!!
Whilst I can understand the book's stance to an extent, as I stated, it does mean that they are looking after their own interests. Personally, I think that in the circumstances they have a duty to their clients and not to themselves. It is their clients who have lost money to them and cannot access their remaining funds.
If Wauwgaming or their bankers are worried about potential ********** claims, then I submit they should have thought about this before they took deposits and granted bonuses which they must have known they could not honour.
My boyfriend advises me that if this bookmaker had been British, he would have destroyed them, in the legal sense, by now (mind you, had they been British the present situation would not have arisen). They committed theft and fraud; they lied to and deliberately misled existing and new clients.
I think that we should not fail to fault Wauwgaming for the way they have acted and for anything they do subsequently unless they do the only honourable thing which is to pay out all client balances in full. Of course, that is not going to happen. Meanwhile, clients just have to wait and hope they get their funds. I don't suppose a large interest payment will be made by their bankers on top of any funds which are received, will it?
Thanks again for the welcome and taking time to respond; I will let you know what, if anything, happens.
Thank you for the welcome; it is "Miss" by the way *hence my username"!!
Whilst I can understand the book's stance to an extent, as I stated, it does mean that they are looking after their own interests. Personally, I think that in the circumstances they have a duty to their clients and not to themselves. It is their clients who have lost money to them and cannot access their remaining funds.
If Wauwgaming or their bankers are worried about potential ********** claims, then I submit they should have thought about this before they took deposits and granted bonuses which they must have known they could not honour.
My boyfriend advises me that if this bookmaker had been British, he would have destroyed them, in the legal sense, by now (mind you, had they been British the present situation would not have arisen). They committed theft and fraud; they lied to and deliberately misled existing and new clients.
I think that we should not fail to fault Wauwgaming for the way they have acted and for anything they do subsequently unless they do the only honourable thing which is to pay out all client balances in full. Of course, that is not going to happen. Meanwhile, clients just have to wait and hope they get their funds. I don't suppose a large interest payment will be made by their bankers on top of any funds which are received, will it?
Thanks again for the welcome and taking time to respond; I will let you know what, if anything, happens.