Technology

Bench is charging people for services they already paid for, some customers say

After obtaining Porkers.com, she acquired the starting start -up seat in the sales of fire late last year, CEO Jesse Tinsley pledged LinkedIn and other places to honor previous customer payments.

“We honor all the services paid in advance, although we will not get revenues directly from that,” Tinsley said in an interview with the founder and investor Julian Weisser.

But some of the bench clients say that they are imposed on books or tax declarations that they previously paid.

A lawsuit submitted on Tuesday by Bench Qorum agent claim that Bench is required to pay for the 2023 tax declaration, although he was already paid for service under the former Bench owners.

The lawsuit claims: “The defendant, Jesse Tinsley, has neglected distortions when he declared a lie that the employer would respect the services paid in advance.”

Another customer was shocked, he asked not to be identified, when they learned that they needed to renew his subscription to obtain accounting books that were completed when they paid for this service two years ago, according to the correspondence that Techcrunch.

When they asked about this, one of the bench representatives told them that “Bench 2.0” had no affiliation with the previous obligations and that the employer was unable to do unpaid work.

CMO CMO cmo CMO strongly opposes that Bench imposes fees on previously paid work. “We were, and we respect the prepaid services for our customers,” he said.

Charni also said that she handed over this 2023 tax to Qorum without an additional payment. But the founder of Qorum Andrew Pietra told Techcrunch that he was asked to continue his subscription to get the return in the first place.

Under its previous ownership, the bench was burned through $ 135 million and struggled to obtain Amnesty International to replace human theme parks. This led to a long delay and large piles of books that still need to be completed, according to former employees.

Many bench clients told Techcrunch that Promiceers.com has also sent them notifications aimed at making them click the approval button that made them invent in pre -paid services.

Many books and returns remained incomplete when the bench was suddenly closed on December 26 last year. Serfects.com, an American company, has announced plans to buy Canadian Fintech after less than 72 hours.

Promiceers.com bought the bench for $ 9 million, bankruptcy files provided at the Canada Show.

Fintech’s sudden collapse caused by a lack of liquidity after the main creditor, and the Canadian National Bank refused to loan an additional amount of $ 7.7 million in December 2024. NBC has already provided $ 51 million in credit to the starting startup, according to previous stadiums.

Ironically, the news of the sudden closure that led to its rescue. The company has already shopped but failed to find a serious buyer, the deposit note.

2025-03-14 21:50:00

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