I have talked to the current owner, I told him of my findings through the museum, which said:
"If you still have not actually purchased the car, I advise you don't. The car has a fake chassis number (VIN), which someone has simply made up (having not even researched what the correct prefix should be). One of the unfortunate aspects of this job is breaking people's hearts when they have paid a lot of money for a car, which turns out is not what it purports to be."
I told the owner without the proper documentation and vehicle number that the car has no historical value.
It is still worth something, but not as a collectible car.
I feel bad for him, he paid over $12k to buy and ship the car, he was trusting the seller and auction house to give an accurate description of the car, but I cannot make his problem my problem.
"If you still have not actually purchased the car, I advise you don't. The car has a fake chassis number (VIN), which someone has simply made up (having not even researched what the correct prefix should be). One of the unfortunate aspects of this job is breaking people's hearts when they have paid a lot of money for a car, which turns out is not what it purports to be."
I told the owner without the proper documentation and vehicle number that the car has no historical value.
It is still worth something, but not as a collectible car.
I feel bad for him, he paid over $12k to buy and ship the car, he was trusting the seller and auction house to give an accurate description of the car, but I cannot make his problem my problem.