The Watchdog: An offer of a free cruise or airline tickets always comes with a catch

The next time you receive an invitation offering a free cruise or airline tickets if you attend a sales seminar with your spouse and your credit card, please do The Watchdog a favor: Remember the Harbin family.

The Harbins, along with thousands of other North Texans, received invites with a return address showing the logo of Royal Caribbean International cruise line. The letters included fake boarding passes with the recipients’ names on them.

The letters were actually from Oasis Getaway, a travel club that opened temporary quarters in a business campus off Southlake Boulevard. Oasis Getaway used the logo until Royal Caribbean lawyers sent a cease-and-desist letter.

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The letters promised a cruise in return for a sales pitch. Kenneth and Jeanne Harbin of Justin like cruises, so they went to Southlake to hear the presentation.

The salesman, Kenneth Harbin recalls, “was slick but believable.”

One salesman was a fast talker from New Jersey who told his personal story. His father left his family. His mother had cancer. He never got to take a vacation. But when he joined the travel program he was now selling, he got to see the world. He’s happily married. Oh, and he’s found Jesus.

And guess what? He sells the same happiness to you for $8,995.

For that one-time payment on a credit card, Oasis Getaway promised to help book vacations around the world at lower prices than generally available.

Oasis Getaway claimed 31 years of travel experience on its website. Actually, the company was only a few months old.

The company sold its services to North Texans by explaining that its partner company purchased vacation packages in bulk and could offer low rates and excellent service for resorts, hotels, cruises, airline tickets and many other travel packages. For families that traveled a lot, the cost would pay for itself in savings, the sales staff promised.

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The Harbins have six children, so they bought seven weeks of condo time, plus the lifetime membership, for a negotiated price of $7,294.

The partner, Reservation Services International of Florida, did provide the Harbins prices that were several hundred dollars lower than what they found on their own and with an actual travel agent.

Oasis offered contracts for lifetime memberships with only a few hundred dollars a year more required for annual dues. Hundreds of Texans paid for memberships, some as low as $3,000, others as high as $10,000.

The Harbins were given five days to cancel. But they didn’t test the service to book vacation trips until a few months later. They said Reservations Services International was slow getting back with price quotes. Sometimes they waited more than a week.

The delays made the Harbins impatient. They booked trips without RSI’s help.

In a protest letter to Oasis Getaway’s owner, the Harbins wrote that they found the membership they bought to be “completely useless so far.”

The Harbins asked for a refund, but they were told the company did not like to give refunds.

So the Harbins researched the company’s owners through state records. Then they filed a small claims lawsuit in an Irving Justice of the Peace court. Oasis Getaway no longer runs sales seminars in Texas, but it lists a residential address in Irving as its current mailing address.

Last week, the Harbins and the Oasis Getaway owners stood in a busy hallway outside the Justice of the Peace court haggling over the amount of a refund.

The owners, Thanh “Tony” Q. Nguyen of Irving and Linh C. Dinh of Duluth, Ga., made the case in the hallway that customers such as the Harbins have the “wrong expectations” about their services.

The Harbins countered that they were only asking for what was promised in the sales seminar.

Dinh has been in the travel business for years. A club he owned in Georgia settled charges of trade and commerce violations for $160,000 in penalties and $35,000 in costs, Georgia records show.

The Georgia Office of Consumer Affairs accused Dinh’s company of misleading customers about the location of travel destinations, not allowing refunds and cancellations, asking customers to pay $249 for free tickets, lying to customers about how the business worked, and using others’ logos to indicate partnerships that did not exist.

The company denied the charges but paid the penalty. As part of that, 43 Georgia customers received refunds of $700 to $7,200.

This time it wasn’t a powerful state agency but Kenneth and Jeanne Harbin. In the hallway, the couple and the owners batted refund numbers back and forth like a tennis rally.

The clincher came when Jeanne Harbin said she didn’t care whether the case went to trial because that would leave a scar on the company’s permanent record that other customers would see.

Hearing that, the owners agreed to refund the Harbins $5,500 in exchange for them dropping the lawsuit. The couple agreed.

Dinh and Nguyen declined to talk to me. “Reporters are never fair,” Dinh said in the parking lot.

Kenneth Harbin’s advice for anyone receiving a come-on with free cruise or airline tickets: “Throw it away.”

Oh, and the Harbins never took the promised free cruise because of paperwork complications.

Read more stories on Watchdog Nation about Oasis Getaway here and here.

In the Know: Tips

Travel clubs are risky. Some who sign a contract after a high-pitched sales seminar later regret it.

Be skeptical of offers of free cruises or airplane tickets in exchange for attending a sales presentation.

Never sign a contract for a travel club immediately after a hard sell. Take the contract home; show it to a lawyer and family members.

If a salesman warns that a deal is no good if you don’t sign immediately, steer clear.

Always check out a club’s reviews on the Internet to find out whether promised services are delivered.

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Who owns Oasis Getaway travel club?

Almost every day, married couples walk into Steve Cosgrove’s travel agency and ask about free cruise and plane tickets in exchange for listening to a sales presentation. But Cosgrove and his staff not only tell them that they are in the wrong place but also warn them that they are going to the wrong place.

Couples see Cosgrove’s Dynamic Travel sign outside his building in an upscale Southlake business park, but they are looking for Oasis Getaway, a 6-month-old travel club whose sales office is tucked in a hard-to-find corner of the campus.

As readers of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram Dave Lieber Watchdog column first learned, Oasis Getaway sells club memberships for thousands of dollars to people who receive mailings offering free travel tickets. (Read Watchdog Nation’s first report on the Oasis Getaway company here.

 Dave Lieber's Watchdog Nation: Bite Back When Businesses and Scammers Do You Wrong

Cosgrove noticed that the mailings displayed logos from well-known cruise companies in place of the company’s own name and return address. The travel agent, whose company has been in business for 30 years, says he complained to three cruise lines. Each ordered Oasis to stop.

After I described an Oasis Getaway sales presentation I attended with my wife (couples are required) in a recent Watchdog column, Cosgrove hung the column on his office wall. Now when couples come to the wrong place, Cosgrove says, he shows them the column and says, “Watch your wallet.”

For this, Cosgrove received a warning letter from a law firm hired by Oasis Getaway’s owners. “Dynamic’s premeditated defamation and disparagement has already caused significant monetary losses to Oasis,” Dallas lawyer Delwin E. Hervey wrote to him.

Cosgrove says he isn’t doing anything wrong.

Hervey, a lawyer who represents Oasis, told me the travel club has many benefits and operates in full compliance with Texas laws. His favorite benefit, he said, is that “clients are able to vacation in one-, two- or three-bedroom condos at discounted rates” of $199 to $999 a week.

Oasis customer Tim Haitz of Southlake told me that he joined but couldn’t book the trips he wanted. He spent six hours on the phone trying to book a vacation to “basically any place warm with palm trees.”

He added, “We were shooting for November, then December, and finally January.” He ended up buying his trip package from another company.

Since his cancellation period had passed, he struggled to terminate his $4,000 membership and get a refund.

But Haitz handled it masterfully. First, he complained to his credit card company, which put a hold on the charge. Then he complained to the Texas attorney general’s office. Five months after his sales session, he received a full refund.

Lawyer Hervey says the company’s contract allows each customer to cancel within the first five days and receive half of his or her money back.

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Customer Chad Gibson of Roanoke told me that after he paid $3,300, he tried to book trips but the travel dates and restrictions were too severe. He said that the sales session was high-pressure and that the staff led him to believe that he could plan his trips well in advance.

Later, he said, he discovered that the best deals were for trips less than two weeks away. He said he was also told that the program offered discounts at hotels nationwide, but he discovered only limited choices.

Three months after his purchase, Gibson continues to negotiate for a refund.

The company lawyer says that if anyone has a problem, “please let me know who they are so that Oasis Getaway can investigate their claim.”

Oasis lists only two top executives or “managers” on its Texas incorporation papers. One is Thanh “Tony” Q. Nguyen, 43, a Dallas-area businessman who the company lawyer says “enjoys working in the industry and helping Oasis Getaway’s clients and their families take vacations that they might otherwise not afford.”

Nguyen did not respond to a written request for an interview.

The other manager listed with the Texas secretary of state is Linh C. Dinh, 40, who has homes in Las Colinas and in Duluth, Ga. He owns other travel clubs and has been in business for more than a decade.

Dinh’s largest company is Vacation Network. It used to operate in Houston and Austin, but its state business license expired last month, records show. Vacation Network also operated out of Arizona and Nevada from 2008 to 2010 but lost its business licenses in those states, too.

Dinh declined an interview request.

Dinh is listed as owner of his other companies but as manager for Oasis. Hervey says Oasis “is an independent business entity and has no connection with Vacation Network.”

No connection — except for Dinh serving as a top officer for both.

Vacation Network has had troubles. In 2007, Dinh settled charges of trade and commerce violations in Georgia, agreeing to pay $160,000 in penalties and $35,000 in costs, state records show.

The Georgia Office of Consumer Affairs accused Dinh’s companies of misleading customers about the location of travel destinations, not allowing refunds and cancellations, asking customers to pay $249 for promised free tickets, lying to customers about how the business worked and using others’ logos to indicate partnerships that did not exist.

The company denied the charges but agreed to pay the penalty.

On the complaint, Georgia authorities listed Vacation Network and three other companies for which Dinh is either owner or CEO: Augusta Reservations Systems, Premiere Vacation Systems and Vacation Reservation Systems. He signed the voluntary agreement. As part of that, 43 Georgia customers received refunds of $700 to $7,200.

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Read more about Oasis Getaway here.

Read more about travel clubs in the popular book, Dave Lieber’s Watchdog Nation: Bite Back When Businesses and Scammers Do You Wrong. The award-winning book shows you how to fight back — and win! The new 2012 edition is available at WatchdogNation.com as a hardcover, CD audio book, e-book and hey, what else do you need? The author is The Watchdog columnist for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Visit our store. The book won two national book awards for social change. 

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