Wouldn't touch these guys with a 10' pole. My uncle died in August 2012. While settling his estate, came across an automatic deduction for $32.02 from one of his checking accounts. Traced it down to 1st Security Bank (another outfit I'd avoid). Never received a statement in the mail, and when I called 1st Security, they wouldn't talk to me without the usual hoops (uncle's death certificate, etc.). Turned out, Evans Glass somehow solicited business from my then-74 year old uncle, had him sign a 10-year finance agreement at 9.99% APR, and while the total amount for the windows was $2424.32, with the finance charge of $1418.08, the total I had to pay from his estate was $3842.40. Now, my uncle was from the depression era, was tight with money, didn't believe in financing that which he could pay for, had over $60,000 in savings and $45,000 in checking, bought a new car with cash in 2004, and somehow Evans Glass found him and talked him into this rediculous financing arrangement, which went against everything my uncle believed in. Can't reach Evans Glass, and after numerous examinations, cant locate 3 Eurocraft windows that would have been installed in 2008 in his house. Next stop is the Attorney General's office to file a complaint against Evans Glass, Inc. AND 1st Security Bank, although I'll probably have to go through another government office to file a complaint against them. Bottom line: I believe Evans Glass through door-to-door outreach, targeted my elderly uncle with a high-pressure sales pitch. Dont know how they managed the 10-year plan. Although he was old and beginning to get sick, my uncle NEVER would have agreed to such a plan. STAY AWAY FROM BOTH THESE BUSINESSES. Even if your experience wasn't as bad, it should bother you that they would do that to someone else.
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