Widow Brings Husband's Ashes to T-Mobile Store After Company Refuses to Cancel His ContractA 56-year-old widow from Wales has said that it was easier -- procedurally speaking -- to bury her late husband than to cancel his T-Mobile cell phone contract.
ByGeoff Weiss•
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Maria Raybould, a 56-year-old widow from Wales, has come to a tragic realization that should also serve as a chilling lesson incustomer service. Procedurally speaking, Raybould says, it was easier to bury her late husband than to cancel his T-Mobile cell phone contract.
After David, 57, had died of cancer, T-Mobile tried to stick Raybould with cancellation fees, and bill collectors repeatedly harassed her seeking payment, shetoldtheTelegraph.
Pushed to her limit, Raybould did the unthinkable: she showed up at her local T-Mobile store with an urn full of David's ashes, a death certificate and the funeral bills. "I lost it in the shop," she says. "I gave them 20 minutes to sort it out. I went outside and had a panic attack."
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尽管商店的经理向Raybould保证they would stop the contract, she continued to receive letters demanding either $200 in unpaid bills or a cancellation fee. "I've had texts since then asking if David wanted to pay an extra $4 for broadband and letters saying that bailiffs would be coming," she said.
While death in our digital age has introduced a host ofunfamiliar complications, such an oversight not only feels like a total no-brainer, but paints a particularly soulless picture of T-Mobile's customer service outfit.
"We apologize to Mrs. Raybould for any distress caused at this difficult time," a spokesman told theTelegraph, adding that the mishap had occurred due to delays in its automated system. "We can confirm that the account has been closed and the balance cleared."