After trying to buy a Ford Escape, I found that I received good service from a Salesman named Al Dennis. I wasn't able to purchase the new 2007 Ford Escape, but Al pointed out that there was a used 2005 Escape with only 17,000 miles. My wife and I took the car out and found that this car was as good as the 2007. When we brought the car back, we told Al that we had decided to select this Escape. As Al was setting the paperwork up for the purchase, a financial advisor named Tim arrived and told us that the car we had taken out wasn't going to be sold to us for the rate of pay he had told us before. Al was as shocked as my wife and I were when Tim had given us this information. Tim had given us the number for the car to select and after we had spent some time with it, he changed the story of the cost. The mistake had been Tim's and a respectable businessman would have agreed to go ahead with the cost we had been offered from the beginning. However, he wanted to close the mistake as if it had never happened. In my opinion, this seems to be just as bad as false advertising. When one thing is promised, that should be the way it stands through the whole transaction of selling the automobile. I'm not sure if I will ever go to Kings Ford again. If I do, I will work with Al but have nothing to do with Tim. He seems to make a promise, then change it as time goes by.
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