The following is from the seller, "rather than have the violin returned to me, PayPal made the buyer destroy the violin in order to get his money back. They somehow deemed the violin as “counterfeit” even though there is no such thing in the violin world."
The seller apparently was willing to take the violin back, but, Paypal did not want to have that effectuated. This is starting to sound a bit fishy. The seller can have this matter resolved through arbitration or court and has a the "authentication" by a luthier in hand which would be the only true assessment of the instrument as the item that was smashed or could have has a substitute instrument destroyed.
The seller apparently was willing to take the violin back, but, Paypal did not want to have that effectuated. This is starting to sound a bit fishy. The seller can have this matter resolved through arbitration or court and has a the "authentication" by a luthier in hand which would be the only true assessment of the instrument as the item that was smashed or could have has a substitute instrument destroyed.