At Bigfella Auto Express, we operate on structure, communication, and professionalism. When those standards aren’t followed, we take it seriously — because our customers trust us to protect their vehicles and their experience.
Recently, we had an issue with FAST FARGO LLC, a carrier operating under:
This was not a misunderstanding. This was a failure to follow agreed protocol.
Route:
Alvin, TX → Whittier, CA
Vehicle:
2025 Ford F-150
Payment Terms (Agreed COD Structure):
Clear. Documented. Accepted.
The delivery was made after the receiving party had closed. There was no proper coordination to ensure someone would be available.
In professional auto transport, if a delivery location is closed, the driver waits until normal business hours unless prior arrangements are made.
That did not happen.
Instead of waiting until the next morning, the driver demanded cash payment and refused to release the vehicle.
We were fully prepared to process the remaining $500 via Zelle the next morning during business hours.
That option was ignored.
Holding a vehicle over timing — when payment terms are already agreed — creates unnecessary tension and reflects poorly on the entire industry.
The carrier also arrived with a different truck than the one originally provided in their documentation photo.
No notification.
No update.
No transparency.
When equipment changes without notice, it raises compliance and liability concerns. Brokers vet carriers based on documented equipment, insurance, and capacity. Surprise equipment swaps undermine that trust.
According to their profile:
While documentation may be on file, paperwork alone does not equal professionalism.
Process matters.
Communication matters.
Respect for the customer matters.
When a carrier does not follow protocol, we act immediately:
Call logs, payment proof, delivery timing, communication gaps.
Our client never negotiates under pressure alone. We step in.
Other brokers deserve to know what to expect. Transparency protects the industry.
We do not repeatedly work with carriers who create unnecessary friction.
There are too many professional drivers in this industry to tolerate behavior that damages relationships.
At Bigfella Auto Express, our carriers must:
Auto transport is a relationship business.
When we pay $1,000 upfront in good faith, we expect the remaining $500 to be handled professionally — not turned into a standoff after hours.
Mistakes happen.
Poor communication happens.
But refusing to release a vehicle and ignoring agreed payment structure is not a small oversight — it’s a protocol violation.
At Bigfella Auto Express, we protect our customers, our brand, and our standards.
That’s non-negotiable.