Fact is that the domain was stolen by the Glenn Smith Account (Ninja Domain Email) on the 17. October 2018 from the origin owner.
@Daehler Ralph -- I can sense your frustration, and empathize with your loss but accusing
@ninjadomain (when he has been responsive and transparent) is defamatory at worst, and disrespectful at best. He has no obligation to assist, and provide screenshots, but here he is, helping.
With respect to your command of the English language, NinjaDomain has had to explain multiple times that he did NOT buy the domain from AGB, only held it as loan collateral. This makes me wonder what other aspects you are mistaken about...
NinjaDomain also provided a screenshot of a NetSol email showing domain being transferred from Alejandros account to NinjaDomains.
Clearly it shows Alejandro as the account holder prior to Glenn. (that email would be more beneficial if we knew the exact date of email; but based on WHOIS updates, it could have occurred around 7 October 2018 when his name first appeared on WHOIS)
I'm not sure what Network Solutions told you
@Daehler Ralph, but if you are telling them the domain was stolen by Glenn, then it's no wonder their investigation is ruling against you.
The Whois History is agreed.
Did you notice the other WHOIS updates prior to October 2018?
From what I can tell
(I may be missing some), the WHOIS updated date changed on:
- 2017-08-19T00:30:08Z
- 2017-03-05T14:48:28Z
- 2015-11-01T14:19:29Z
- 2015-09-24T16:17:09Z
WHOIS remained under privacy through these updates. Just noting, since there appears to be proof of the domain first being transferred from AGB NetSol to Glenn
NetSol account, then the domain was likely in AGB NetSol account under privacy, prior to the transfer to Glenn.
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What sticks out the most to me is the below comment from
@ninjadomain
I saw it sell for $20k on Sedo before you purchased and asked him what was going on and Alejandro said it was a pricing error and he was not going to sell.
Not sure what exactly that email says, but since Alejandro said it was a pricing error, clearly he had knowledge of the Sedo sale. And should this turn into what was
previously theorized, that email could serve as proof of the scam. Though, I'm not so sure that theory is what actually happened here...
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Not sure if this is related, but around the same time of this fiasco, Alejandro was reaching out to NetSol via Twitter...
Also on Twitter, but two years earlier in 2016, Alejandro and NetSol appear to carry out on an odd public conversation about password resets...
HERE ... and less than a week later he was locked out again?