A friend of mine gave a contractor a $28,000 deposit over a year ago. The money is gone, the contractor has a handful of customers in this position. As usual cops say it is civil. You can win a judgment, can't get blood out of a turnip! Might even get the contractor a little jail time, won't get the work done. The friend is retired so a twenty-eight thousand dollar loss bites pretty big. Meantime no other contractor wants to mess with a job halfass started and walked away from. The contractor is licensed, had references, the whole nine yards. However with all of the demand for work after the storms he took a lot of deposits, spent the money, can't do the work if he wanted to with no money. I'm sure he is still basically Ponzi scheming. Taking deposits, using some of that money to do a little work on older contracts and try to stay out of jail.
That is one reason I have long been a do it yourselfer whenever possible. Sixteen trees 80' to 120' tall, I went and bought a chainsaw and started laying down trees! Had some nervous neighbors but me and John Deere had a plan. At this point I have laid down fifty or so large trees. My current saw has a 32" bar, I have felling wedges and proper safety equipment. Tree removal is another area with lots of scammers. I hired a pro when a bucket truck was needed. Scared my mule, they had no idea of safety! A licensed and bonded contractor but he sent his son to push a small crew. The son did the cutting and had no idea how. Invited a barber's chair then did much of his cutting from behind the tree!
For those that would only tackle small trees, most fatalities occur with small trees, those under sixteen inches diameter breast high. Those land owners think they can handle and pros can get a little careless with.
I'm getting past the do everything myself age now and I find that skills I haven't used in decades are no longer there. I'll have to hire contractors for any medium and large projects now. Guess I will dust off ol' Betsy and watch them, my trigger finger is still good!
Hu