On a related note (to both this thread and the previous one linked to above), I recently saw an auction of Festool tools on eBay UK. It immediately rang alarm bells with me, for several reasons:
The picture was of a Festool stack consisting of a jigsaw, C12 drill (full kit), centrotec bit set, and a planer; the seller had simply described this as a 'Festool tool kit';
The advert was extremely badly written;
It included a few pieces of completely false information (such as that Festool tools could only be purchased via the Festool website);
The seller had a feedback rating of just 1;
The seller only offered one method of payment - Cash.
I contacted the seller, and asked for the full part numbers of what was included in the auction, along with a few other questions such as how old they were, where he'd got them from, why he was selling, etc. Basic info I'd expect a genuine seller to be happy to share. No real surprise to me, but I didn't get any response at all.
Call me suspicious if you like but it seemed pretty damn obvious to me that this lot was stolen, as the seller didn't seem to have much idea as to what it actually
was that he was selling. I may be wrong on that, but that's the impression I got.
I looked at eBay's policy on 'suspected stolen goods', and lo and behold, they don't want to know. It just says to contact the police - like they'd really care about this.
In the end it went for around ?710 IIRC. In my view (and it is just my view, I'm not accusing anyone

) the buyer had to have at least a
slight clue that something was wrong, but they still bid on it. I don't understand the mentality of some people - anyone who knows enough about tools to want to buy these should know that stealing tools (effectively someone's livelyhood) is pretty damn low, and should never be condoned.
Of course, as I said I could be completely wrong about all this, and it could be completely legitimate, so I don't think it'd be right to link to the actual auction (though I'm sure it wouldn't take much detective work if you wanted to find it

).
In the end, it's not just the thief himself you need to worry about - it's the scum who's happy to support him by buying the stuff, just to save a few quid...